How do you cut your tubes?

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MAB11

Member
Joined
Aug 4, 2010
Messages
97
Location
Wichita, KS
I want to start cutting my own tubes but i'm not sure how to go about it.
Do I use a tube cutter, hack saw, chop saw? Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
 
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chuck mine up in collet chuck , cut it as neer to the chuck as you can . low speed you can use a hack saw on the lathe or with a little faster speed you can use a parting tool ...

David
 
I bought one of those little metal chop saws from Harbor Freight but I haven't cut any brass with it yet, mostly just steel and aluminum rods for my metal lathe.
 
I bought the HF saw on sale for $25 of course picked up some extra blades too.
It is a tad easier than small tubing cutter had been using but not much. Think just need more experience with the saw. I am timid tighten the hold down clamp.
 
I use the same thing Butch posted. Just slip a 1/8" shim under the tube and go to town. I cut 30 squire tubes yesterday in about 15 minutes.
 
I use the $25 HF with the blades. There's less waste with it than the 6" since the blade is so much thinner. I did have problems with it a few months back. The switch burnt out, but a $3 switch I had laying around here and a little work with a dremel to make it fit solved my problems. I've had several HF motors burn up on me over the years in the small tools (never bought anything big from them) but they are usually an incredibly easy fix. I soldered the motor back together in a water pump a few months ago while in the field with nothing but a cigarette lighter. The thing is still running 8 hrs a day....
 
I bought one of those little metal chop saws from Harbor Freight but I haven't cut any brass with it yet, mostly just steel and aluminum rods for my metal lathe.

+1, and use the 20% off coupon and it's really inexpensive. :wink:
 
Does anyone know if the little $25 unit will cut 5/8" mild steel bar stock? I want to make some really clean angle cuts that will take little if any filing or sanding to get to the point where they will slide smoothly
 
tabletop band saw with a metal cutting blade works fine for me..

Yep, that works nice. Plus use that stupid "insertion" tool you bought when you bought all the starter stuff and roll the tube instead of "pushing" it through the band saw.

Plumbers love the insertion tool. This is the only practical use I have found for it. It still clutters up my work bench because when I started, I thought it was a "must have" tool.
 
HF saw

I modified the little holder so I could make a more educated guess as to the length of the tube.
Took 4 popsicle sticks, epoxied them together and then epoxied that to the back of the clamp.
I put in one old tube and cut it off then removed the entire holder.
Thus i had the exact position of the blade and measured backwards.
 

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Does anyone know if the little $25 unit will cut 5/8" mild steel bar stock? I want to make some really clean angle cuts that will take little if any filing or sanding to get to the point where they will slide smoothly
I would say no , it don't have enough power and uses a plain steel blade . The $29 cut off saw uses the composit disks and I think it has more power so would be a better choioce for cutting steel .
 
I modified the little holder so I could make a more educated guess as to the length of the tube.
Took 4 popsicle sticks, epoxied them together and then epoxied that to the back of the clamp.
I put in one old tube and cut it off then removed the entire holder.
Thus i had the exact position of the blade and measured backwards.

This is a great idea!
 
I use the same saw, I cut some blank scrap (about 1" long) and drilled them to match the size of tube I would be cutting (7mm, 8mm, 3/8" etc.) these I clamp into the saw, lining up the edge of the blank stock with the blade, slide the tube in to the blank and get a nice clean cut. If i'm cutting a lot of tubes the same size, I'll clamp a 1x to the bench as a stop. In just a few minutes I have a bunch of tubes, the same length, with nice clean cuts.
Not my original idea, Penn Ind. adds these to the HB mini saw to justify a $30 mark-up.
Dave
 
I saw the original post and thought the saw looked like a toy...but then a bunch of people started saying that they used it, so I bought one. It is no joke, it works well. I do not think you will be disappointed.
Moke
 
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