To mount the knobs and rods I had to bore holes through both arms near the bottom. First I had to rework the bottom section of the "handle" arm. I had left it wider than the other arm, and while I am sure I had a reason, I couldnt remember why I had done that, and it didnt allow for enough of the rod to clear the arm. While using the spokeshave, I went ahead and reworked the curve in the bottom of the stretcher to more closely match the curves of the arms. After that, I used a brace and bit to bore both holes.
Heres a shot of the saw, at that point:
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Heres a shot of the first bolt in the vise:
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I cut the blade with an extra 1/4 inch beyond each hole location. Heres my high tech band saw blade cutting apparatus:
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To drill the pin holes in the blade, I just clamped the blade to a piece of scrap and had at it. It took some pressure to get started, but once it did, the bit had no problem. I did use my fist under my chin to help apply steady pressure on the handle of the hand drill.
I have heard of others punching holes in the blade with a hammer, a punch and a block of hardwood (end grain up). I tried this before and didnt have good results. For whatever reason, Ive had much better luck with just drilling. Maybe my blades are cheap or something...
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To apply the twine, I wrapped it around one arm several times and then started looping it around both arms. When I ran out of twine, I wrapped the running end around the loops several times and then passed it through between them. I inserted the toggle stick between the loops and started winding. As the twine twisted tight, the extra oil got squeezed out. I just rubbed it into the saw.
To test the blade tension, I plucked it with a fingernail. Heres where I realized that I should have shorted the blade holes by 1/8 rather than 1/16 of an inch. The tenons were fully seated and the blade was not fully tensioned. The real fix would have been to make a new blade, and I probably will - at some point. The temporary fix was to put a washer between each knob an the frame. I kept on applying tension until it started to sound musical; changing from a "thunk" to a "twang!"
Time for some test cuts. Not very pretty, but that was my fault not the saw. I wasnt really watching what I was doing: I kept looking at the saw to see if it was flexing or moving. Nope - ship shape! It worked great.
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