OK, so now I want to snip that off the end, maybe in a way that allows it to stand up with the face angled forward, like a bookend or something. Sounds easy… right?
So I get out the electric hand saw, blade is not really long enough… gonna be a really shaky cut, not really liking that option.
go visit a friend with a circular table saw, the blade is only 10", the blade is not large enough to cut all the way through.
Friend suggests band saw, so I take my head over to Harbor Freight, discover the work piece is too thick for either a 9" or a `14" band saw.
So now I am wondering, what are my options to do this on a controlled cut?
Can you put a chain saw on a table?
What are the affordable options for cutting larger work pieces?
part of my motivation is that I have a 1000mm X-carve and can easily seeing the diameters of the ends I am carving into going up quite significantly.
They don’t usually come sliced thin like pizza, so I need a solution that will scale to 2-3x what I am showing in the picture…
I would probably use a crosscut sled on a table saw. Crank the height up on the blade of the table saw, cut one side, flip and cut the other side. Then use a hand saw to cut the remaining middle piece to complete the cut. That will be quicker and much less effort than handsawing the whole thing !
Either way, you’re probably looking at using a belt sander to even everything up no matter how you cut it.
One of the challenges is making sure everything is square. You might want to invest in a laser level to project straight lines onto the wood, so that you can mark the cuts.
my instinct, since I have very little money for this, is to go with the first option, and attach it to an electirc chainsaw in a 16" range. Will give me controlled cuts, should be enough DOC if I set it up right, and will let me see if the need for something more sophisticated is there.