Use a dewalt drill in low driving big fasteners and you will blow up the gearbox in short order. After exploding a bunch of yellow, I switched to red and haven't had a failure since.
It reminds me of a rig that showed up at my grandparents farm just before winter. It was used to cut up firewood which was every scrap of burnable junk imaginable. Safety guards are for sissies.
18v and 20v are the same thing ("voltage") in cordless tools. 18v is the typical loaded voltage and 20v is the typical no load voltage so basically just marketing on the voltage. Goes back to the cells they use...
Now Dewalt did have 18v NiCd which was a different battery formfactor but you can get an adapter to run the modern lithium batteries in them. The newest tools may also be better tech (brushless motors, etc.).
I have a Rockwell 5A corded 4 1/2" circular saw, bought for occassional use.
Thing is that the arbor size is 3/8" (9.5 mm) and except for Rockwell, most after-market 4 1/2" circular saws have an arbor size of 5/8" or 7/8".
Is there an available adapter and is it safe to use?
Thanks!
If I ever need to make big cuts in anything I just take it to Home Depot or Lowe’s or whatever and pay for the cut on their commercial machines. It’s stupid cheap and saves me room in the garage. My mitre saw is just a crappy tire one right now. It does the job. If I ever get a new one it’ll be a sliding reasonably lightweight one on a mobile stand with wheels. Moving the pig around gets old very fast.
If I ever need to make big cuts in anything I just take it to Home Depot or Lowe’s or whatever and pay for the cut on their commercial machines. It’s stupid cheap and saves me room in the garage. My mitre saw is just a crappy tire one right now. It does the job. If I ever get a new one it’ll be a sliding reasonably lightweight one on a mobile stand with wheels. Moving the pig around gets old very fast.
I have a Rockwell 5A corded 4 1/2" circular saw, bought for occassional use.
Thing is that the arbor size is 3/8" (9.5 mm) and except for Rockwell, most after-market 4 1/2" circular saws have an arbor size of 5/8" or 7/8".
Is there an available adapter and is it safe to use?
Thanks!
You could print a spacer ring or probably buy one. Make sure spacer ring is thinner than blade so bolt pressure is applied to blade not spacer. I wouldn't be concerned about safety in that case. Hell, there are plastic hubcentric rings for vehicle wheels. The ring provides alignment when loose, the bolts take the load when tight.
I have a Rockwell 5A corded 4 1/2" circular saw, bought for occassional use.
Thing is that the arbor size is 3/8" (9.5 mm) and except for Rockwell, most after-market 4 1/2" circular saws have an arbor size of 5/8" or 7/8".
Is there an available adapter and is it safe to use?
Thanks!
Not 4.5" blades but I have bought other blades (6.5 and 7.25) that came with a spacer for smaller arbors.
A quick look at HD online and it appears my spot check outcome...either 3/8" or come with the spacer (in the 4.5" size). So you may be in luck. Lots are online only. At the same time some brands just like to try and force you to buy their consumables....
I have a Rockwell 5A corded 4 1/2" circular saw, bought for occassional use.
Thing is that the arbor size is 3/8" (9.5 mm) and except for Rockwell, most after-market 4 1/2" circular saws have an arbor size of 5/8" or 7/8".
Is there an available adapter and is it safe to use?
Thanks!
Metabo is the rebrand of Hitachi . Been around forever , they just decided to make them all one brand .
I have a metal cutting skill saw , hypoid drive , you need to change from ferrous to non ferocious blades but it will eat a 3/8 steel plate like plywood @Chris , you can just use a flat washer that measures on outside diameter and drill it 3/8 in the bore , spacers are just disposable metal. @mimico , that Kreg jig will make your saw follow a track , but an actual track saw has a zero clearance gasket beside the blade so there is no chipping and alignment is dead easy .
Use a dewalt drill in low driving big fasteners and you will blow up the gearbox in short order. After exploding a bunch of yellow, I switched to red and haven't had a failure since.
Any suggestion as to where I can go to place an order?
HD doesn't have them and the Sales Associate seemed clueless, have not seen them on Amazon .
Thanks
Any suggestion as to where I can go to place an order?
HD doesn't have them and the Sales Associate seemed clueless, have not seen them on Amazon .
Thanks
If you give me accurate dimensions, I can print some up for you. Paying to have them machined will cost more than the saw. If you get lucky, a friendly person with a lathe could bang out a spacer out in little time.
The poverty solution that may work is a washer with the proper OD and use a step drill to hit the proper ID.
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