I recently bought a used Busy Bee 14” wood/metal bandsaw.
According to the manual I found online, the lowest blade speed possible using the existing pulleys is 700 sfm which is way too fast for metal.
Using some clever online calculators, I worked out that a 1.5” pulley driving a 7” intermediate pulley to 1.5” pulley driving a 8” wheel pulley will get me into to 290 sfm range.
Easy peasy right?
Not so fast, cowboy, good luck finding such pulleys. The largest step pulley I can find is 6”.
Of course the ‘easy’ way out of this is to make the pulleys. Never done this before but how hard could it be right?
Rough out the diameters and cut the grooves.
Of course a 8” diameter x 10” chunk of 6061 is not going to be cheap. If I can even find it.
I also wonder if I could add a 7” or 8” pulley to the end of the stack.
The other option is to switch to 3-phase with a VFD.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
According to the manual I found online, the lowest blade speed possible using the existing pulleys is 700 sfm which is way too fast for metal.
Using some clever online calculators, I worked out that a 1.5” pulley driving a 7” intermediate pulley to 1.5” pulley driving a 8” wheel pulley will get me into to 290 sfm range.
Easy peasy right?
Not so fast, cowboy, good luck finding such pulleys. The largest step pulley I can find is 6”.
Of course the ‘easy’ way out of this is to make the pulleys. Never done this before but how hard could it be right?
Rough out the diameters and cut the grooves.
Of course a 8” diameter x 10” chunk of 6061 is not going to be cheap. If I can even find it.
I also wonder if I could add a 7” or 8” pulley to the end of the stack.
The other option is to switch to 3-phase with a VFD.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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