Exactly. You're in the sign business. Buy a tool.break down and buy a table saw......you can find them on craiglist or pawn shops cheap instead of buying new.
Excuse me if I'm wrong, but how can a sign business, boasting they do everything with over 30 employees in over a 50,000 square foot shop, not have a single saw ??
Essentially, you need a saw of various kinds in order to produce these signs you have advertised. If it's a matter of cost, I can appreciate that, but space or manpower-wise..... I appears you have that.
Who's boasting?
We have lots of saws, just no table saw. I have the space for one but it is not in an ideal part of the plant and I want to avoid having to walk to the other end of the building passing delicate jobs carrying pvc laced with shavings. It would be more efficient if there was a solution that was smaller scale which is why I asked the question. Personally I'd rather ask a question and see if someone has a better suggestion before I went the table saw route.
Whoever pissed in Gino's cheerios needs to stop, it's making him grumpy and condescending...
Excuse me if I'm wrong, but how can a sign business, boasting they do everything with over 30 employees in over a 50,000 square foot shop, not have a single saw ??
Essentially, you need a saw of various kinds in order to produce these signs you have advertised. If it's a matter of cost, I can appreciate that, but space or manpower-wise..... I appears you have that.
Who's boasting?
We have lots of saws, just no table saw. I have the space for one but it is not in an ideal part of the plant and I want to avoid having to walk to the other end of the building passing delicate jobs carrying pvc laced with shavings. It would be more efficient if there was a solution that was smaller scale which is why I asked the question. Personally I'd rather ask a question and see if someone has a better suggestion before I went the table saw route.
Whoever pissed in Gino's cheerios needs to stop, it's making him grumpy and condescending...
Maybe he, like probably at least a few others here are just amazed that you could grow your business to a size of needing 30 employees, call your shop a "plant" but can't easily produce one of the easiest and most frequently used installation methods in our industry. The word "boasting" is just a common phrase to describe you "having" what you have.
Now, if your question was "How can we cut french cleats out of PVC and not make a speck of dust or shavings?", then my answer would have been call your local CNC routing shop and have them make you a huge pile of them and clean them off before bringing them into the plant.
We were cutting them on the CNC with a whiteside 1508 90º v groove bit. It worked great but lately we've been too busy to justify using the CNC for simple cleats. I was constantly needing a table saw and tired of running home or bringing mine in so I splurged on a bit more saw than I needed and a feather board.
Whoever pissed in my Cheerios missed, because I don't even eat them.
Three generations in business, 50,000 sq. feet, 30 employees, a little "dabbling" in signs, but heavy investments in lots and lots of high end machinery. Well, that explains it perfectly. I'd keep the plant clean, farm out any and every type of work not compatible with my cleanliness standards and protect our equipment investment. Its when one of us tries to do everything or be everything to everyone, that we get distracted from what it is we do best.
I'm sorry but i'm still laughing at this "comeback", all in good fun but absolutely hilarious.
That's the whole point. It's all in good fun. Some people just realize things a little too late. Nothing earth shattering about a table saw or a place to put it, not with your background. I'm not upset because you asked what is basically considered a question for a noobie, but turns out you are one afterall. Sorry to hear about your fire and especially glad no one was hurt. Not sure if your website is up-to-date, but I did do my due diligence and checked quite a bit out before answering you. How else, would I have known what I did ?? Certainly not by your Opening Post or your profile. Nope, I do my homework and that's when nothing added up.
If I may, what are you cutting ?? Just cutting them down to size or actually putting the angled matching grooves on the back..... or both ?? This would determine what tool to go after, but the chop saw Marlene pictured would be a consideration, but I'd get something better than a home model Craftsman. Look into Makita, Milwaukee or DeWalt. You'll need amps. The more amps, the more control you'll have in the end.
I have considered this route as well but like you my CNC has too many other well paying jobs to sacrifice time to make cleats.
I guess I will just have to break down and buy the table saw. Since this will mainly be used for cleats does anyone have any suggestions for a decent saw? I don't woodwork so i'm not up on what the good manufacturers are these days.