Haha i could ask him. Next time i see him ill ask. He is a cnc opperator btw.
Haha i could ask him. Next time i see him ill ask. He is a cnc opperator btw.

yes.... do that!you do that![]()
I found it but its only for a porter cable bandsawI know I have seen them for other ones, but its been a while, less popular items sometimes get put by the way side.
http://www.blackbookoftools.com/ProductDetails.aspx?ProductID=18923
Woudn't be too hard to build I don't think,
Drill, grinder, welder and a portaband you could build dang near anything and not spend thousands of dollars on cut off wheels

Abrasive saws are messy dinosaurs. I switched a few years back to a carbide chop saw. No burs, no sparks, no heat and shavings are easier to sweep up.
Don't get me wrong band saws are rockstars, but take up to much floorspace. Portabands are great and milwakee just came out with a smaller size for like 2-225.00. Next on my list for the jobsite. I do a lot of cutting in tube (square and round), pipe, alltread, and strut. Some for finished ends and others to be welded. Can't beat the carbide for smooth square cuts.
Check them all out but remember using them isn't the only consideration. Storage and portability where parts of my conserns.
No not a cold saw. No coolant either. It is a chop saw with a carbide blade. It looks exactly like a friction but turns at a slower rpm. Dewalt, Milwakee, Makita, and Jepson all make them and now theres a new one called a rage does both wood and metal and is a slider. The rage does not have the cutting capacity of a 12" or 14" carbide saw, but can do like angle and lite tube or pipe.
I am a general and electrical contractor and partner in a metal fab shop. We use the p!ss out of them. New they are about 400 and a replacement blade is about 125-175 to replace. Way less deflection in the cuts too.