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best (inexpensive home) tool to cut thin brass cleanly?

I've been etching brass for a couple years now, but need a better way to cut and trim my plates than a hack saw and a straight edge... What's the best power tool for getting straight edges on thin brass plates? I've been thinking scroll saw or band saw, but I've been told that band saw blades will walk. would a scroll saw be a good idea?

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Berkin says: Feb 23, 2009. 7:16 AM
One word: Dremel.
jeff-o says: Feb 3, 2009. 11:47 AM
The best way to do it, on either a scroll saw or a band saw, is to glue the brass between two layers of wood. Make sure that you have the right solvent to remove the wood later! The wood will give you a sturdier object to hold on to, and will prevent burrs from forming on the brass. The band saw blade won't walk if it is tensioned properly, is the right type of blade, and is properly calibrated.
Sandisk1duo says: Jan 21, 2009. 2:01 PM
LARGE tin snips?
djmachet says: Jan 20, 2009. 10:38 PM
Not sure how thick the plates are you're talking about - anything below 5mm (I don't speak inch) you should avoid band sawing or at least use a piece of flat masonite to absorb the vibration cutting will cause. Why 5mm, well standard sawing practice recommends a minimum of 2 saw teeth touching the surface of the job at all times or there'll be a tendency for the teeth to dig in vibrating the job and ripping out teeth (the finer the saw blade, the better your chances - won't lie I've cut .5 material when noone was looking but the blade doesn't love me for it). As for cutting straight - I don't think you have too much to worry about, thin material doesn't offer as much resistence so you can pretty much control the cut but I'd recommend using as wide a blade as possible with guides keeping the back of the blade (behind the teeth) straight so that it won't have the chance to wander off course. I won't go into the safety of it though - bandsaws favourite food... fingers! we have a small foot operated guillotine here that we cut brass plates around 0.5 mm on (could probably go up to 1mm but I'm sucking it out of my thumb here), when you start getting around the 2mm to 3mm thickness of material I'd say you're talking about a pretty heavy (probably motor run) guillotine - yes its only brass and not steel but I don't think that'll make it any easier to cut guillotine wise. Back to the band saw - if you're looking for a lubricant, try paraffin. Good luck
11010010110 says: Dec 10, 2008. 4:28 PM
disk saw thin sheets - guillotine (like the 2 guys on the bottom said)
tallest says: Dec 5, 2008. 10:53 PM
tallest in reply to tallestDec 5, 2008. 10:54 PM
oh, if you use a ripping fence on a band saw you won't get the wander problem.
Big Bwana says: Nov 24, 2008. 2:58 PM
40 tooth or better tungsten carbide tipped saw blade, look for a thin kerf, for a 7 1/4 circular saw or bigger (( sliding compound miter type would be the best )) now I'm not 100 % sure how well it would cut brass but they sail right threw thick aluminum even large heat sinks, and if you use the guide or a fence your cuts should be straight ...
KentsOkay says: Nov 24, 2008. 8:48 AM
Tin snips?
gschoppe (author) in reply to KentsOkayNov 24, 2008. 2:08 PM
well, when I say thin... i think I may be thicker than that... I want to get a cut that doesn't deform the metal (tin snip cause curvature and noticeable crimping), and I think the stuff I'm working with would destroy a paper cutter pretty fast... I think i need a saw to do this job right, without deformation.
KentsOkay in reply to gschoppeNov 24, 2008. 2:47 PM
Then I'd recommend NachoMahma's technique.
NachoMahma says: Nov 24, 2008. 2:33 PM
. Clamp the brass between two sheets of hardwood or metal. Use a fine-tooth saw to cut all three layers at once.
killerjackalope says: Nov 24, 2008. 11:05 AM
An old style guillotine will cut thin sheet metal, the ones that look like a big heavy sword on a hinge... You could fold it and cut from inside the fold...
caitlinsdad says: Nov 24, 2008. 8:57 AM
Experiment with a heavy duty paper cutter. The ones that have a big single blade that chop down. It might work with thin sheets of brass if you just want to cut a straight line. Maybe some sheet metal brakes or formers have a cutter built in.
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