▼EXPAND THIS SECTION FOR MORE RESOURCES RELATED TO THIS VIDEO▼ *Tools used in this video:* Harvey Bandsaw: www.harveywoodworking.com/collections/bandsaws Fence setup gauge: www.chipsfly.com/bandsaw-companion.html *Links related to this video:* -Video about band saw guides: th-cam.com/video/3MPR2kcMhJU/w-d-xo.html -Video about band saw blade selection: th-cam.com/video/z7n7Gg4QOkc/w-d-xo.html -Video about choosing a good bandsaw: th-cam.com/video/sUsKYElDKl0/w-d-xo.html -More videos on our website: stumpynubs.com/ -Subscribe to our e-Magazine: stumpynubs.com/browse-and-subscribe/ -Check out our project plans: stumpynubs.com/product-category/plans/ -Instagram: instagram.com/stumpynubs/ ★THIS VIDEO WAS MADE POSSIBLE BY★ Harvey Woodworking Machinery: www.harveywoodworking.com/ *Please help support us by using the link above for a quick look around!* (If you use one of these affiliate links, we may receive a small commission)
Quite informative and very usefully information to use on my saw this week. From a former michigander born and raised now transplanted to Arizona. Thank you!
Thank you! Im going to try this on my low-cost WEN this weekend. This bandsaw, by the way, comes with bearing blade guides as standard equipment. No high-cost option necessary.
Thank you! I'm going to try this on my low-cost WEN this weekend. By the way, that bandsaw comes with bearing blade guides as standard equipment. No high-cost option necessary.
Great video. I would just add one small step that has saved me a lot of fidgeting.... back off both the upper and lower guides before setting the tracking and the tension. Once that's where you want it, then set the bearings (or guide blocks) for the clearances you prefer. If you've ever tried to get the tracking right while a bearing is holding back the adjustment, you know why some folks get so frustrated.
Of all the things I’ve tried on my saw, from expensive roller guides to a fancy fence, I’ve never beaten the blade drift. And here it was sitting front of me the whole time: rotate the table! How I managed to miss that in every other tips video I’ve watched is beyond me. Can’t wait to get down to the shop and sort it out! Thanks a million!
Nice to know I am not alone, just commented on the same thing. What a laugh after having to live with that for so long because I thought it was just a me thing.
If you take a black magic marker and draw lines around the edges of each of your wheel bearings you can easily see when your blade is spinning due to the friction of the blade! A lot easier on old eyes to see!
I have not used my bandsaw for many years, because I could not solve this drifting issue. I have looked and looked online and found no solutions. I will be trying these adjustments this weekend. Thank you, Thank You, THANK YOU for this video!
Thank you, James. Can’t believe that the instructions on my bandsaw deals with the fence rather than the table to solve drift. One of the best bandsaw brands out there, and still… 🙄
I bought a Harvey bandsaw C14 when you last recommended it, love it. Now the “Black Friday sale” price is up by nearly $800. Crazy Increase in just 1 year
This is why I subscribed. I’ve been struggling all year with a new saw and multiple sets of blades, bearings, and belts. Straightforward and 100% effective.
First it was sharpening chisels and plane irons, now it is setting up my bandsaw. EVERY time I watch one of your videos my quality of work improves and my frustration goes down. Thank you so much!
This video changed the way my bandsaw performs! I was very discouraged not being able to correct the drift and then you came up with the solution to my problem as my blade was not centered on the wheel. It is now true and I am able to resaw with my bandsaw. Thank you very much!
James, this should be a must-see video for anyone that owns a bandsaw. So much of what you showed here I had to learn out of trial and error and with the help of old-salts' as yourself. One thing I'd like to see or explained is when the upper guide is raised or lowered, it might not track in perfect alignment with the blade. This can cause tracking and/or other issues as well. Some machines allow for adjusting the alignment, such as yours, I believe, but older styles don't, and might require re-adjusting the upper guides when moving the guides from an inch or two from the table to ten or twelve inches up.
Of all the tools in my shop the bandsaw is definitely the most difficult and tedious to get setup correctly. I have watched many different setup videos. Yours makes the most sense. I’m going to give it a try using your recommendations. Thank you sir!!
Thanks for the clip. I have a table top Ryobi band saw. It took me almost a year to figure out why it wasn't cutting straight. Now I got it. I wish I have watched this presentation much earlier, which would have saved me a lot of time and headache. Everything you said is correct.
i wished to thank you so much !!! I own a bench top band saw for small wood work in my shop since some years. I did in the past some various adjustments but never succeeded to have quasi no drift. Looking at YOUR video, i have understood why !!! I did again various adjustments, revised all settings, reworked the table holes and axis. Now : it's a dream, all work perfectly, quasi NO drift, 90 deg cuts are excellent. As a complement i use a home made micrometric and magnetic fence jig and get excellent results. ie resawing a piece of wood of 50 mm large down to 42 mm exactly at a glance, so easy now. A little hand plane work to adjust and all if fine in no time. So, again thank you, you made my day !!! Every time i will use my and saw, i will think about you ... PS: i did watch may other videos which were great and useful but yours opened my mind on my issue.
I totally agree with all you have said. People who watch this video will be able to set up their machine properly and get excellent results. I have set up machines for people in the Woodturning Club and they are always amazed how good this tool can be. Thank you, Jack from the UK.
You did it again! My bandsaw has been cutting perfectly until two days ago. Last night I was going to search YT for a tuning video I'd seen a year ago, but at the top of my feed was this one. This has happened before, just as I set out to search, you have a new vid on the topic I need. After tweaking the blade on the top wheel and adjusting my rear guide bushing, I was cutting 1/16th inch strips again using my fence! Thx.
I have setup my saw in the same way as described in this video after watching a similar one by the guy from Carter Guides and my little benchtop 10", 1/2 horse Rikon cuts true and straight through 5" hardwood all day long, these tricks really, really do work for all saws. Thanks!
Most can probably agree that a bandsaw is one of the last investments they make for a shop. Partially because of these fiddly issues you just smashed in a few short minutes! ...and probably because of that I ended up with a bandsaw from the alley. It wasn't working and the blade was off. I found that the cover for the blade was bent and the safety switch wouldn't engage!! It's just a green baby saw, but it works! I look forward to further adjustments and putting it to the test. ....thanks again!
Thank you! I have my grandpa's old Craftsman bandsaw that is in need of a tune up and this is perfect. I inherited several tools after he passed away and I'm slowly getting them cleaned, tuned, and finding the manuals for them.
finally a video on bandsaws that will work. when i trained i was taught these steps. one trick i discovered myself for the tension is to pluck it till it becomes a note. just like tuning a guitar for instance.
Thanks James. This is how I setup my 14” Delta, but FYI, Shopsmith bandsaws do not have crowned wheels and the blade is designed to run against “auto-tracking” bearings which position the blade to the back of the wheels. Also, due to the conical shape of the upper wheel and the way that the upper wheel is tensioned on a cantilevered arm, drift is common. I love the Shopsmith bandsaw but it is a different animal. Scott
From the witty title onwards, this is a great video that has to be the clearest and most concise tutorial on setting up bandsaws. Thank you so much James
Hola! For someone like me that does not (yet) have a bandsaw, this video is still very helpful. It is very informative and educational. It also provides insight as to what lies ahead once this tool is in my shop, thanks for this video, take care and have a good one. Adios! 🖐
It's getting a bit repetitions but... Again I say... Great video, packed with useful, pragmatic info. Took me watching many (not so great) videos to learn what James presents in 7 minutes. (wish I had seen this video a while back, would have saved me hours spent on the others). Also.. The only person I have ever seen that states that either of the 2 common ways of setting tracking will work (but not any 'in between' settings). Dead on! Thank you once again Mr Nubs!!
This video is exactly what I needed at just the right time. I just bought a used Jet band saw that belonged to my friend's dad who passed away last month. I ordered a new blade for it, and it was just delivered yesterday. So this weekend's project will be installing the new blade and making all of these adjustments that were explained in this video. Thank again for another top notch video!
Hi James, Fantastic video. I have seen many videos on how to set up a bandsaw but this one is the simplest to follow. I have an old DeWalt 3501 and took my time to set it up properly. It has blocks and not bearings so it was great to see you cover this as many videos don't, they just explain bearings. I just wished you would have posted this video 4 years ago. LOL. I do as you suggested and check the set up periodically and always after tilting the table. I make a lot of segmented pens so an accurate set up is vital for me. Take care James and thanks again for this video. Cheers, Huw
Nice video. Made me go check my big Laguna and I found it had drifted out of alignment. Even for us who've been in the crafts for decades benefit from reviewing this kind of information.
I have adjusted my bandsaw before (Jet 18"), but after watching your video and I gave it another go and this time I was way more diligent especially with the lower guides, and now she is purring like a kitten and cutting straight and true. Thanks!!
I just got the new 16" South Bend bandsaw. I actually had to adjust the top bearing guide system to be parallel and square with the blade. It's something I had never heard of before and was interesting to fix.
Watched one of your other bandsaw set up videos the other day. I have an old Craftsman 12" bandsaw. Used the techniques you went over, and my saw works so much better now
James, thank you so much! I've been tinkering fruitlessly trying to improve my accuracy ever since I bought my first band saw. This has been an enlightenment! Thank you, thank you.
Your advice (and a new blade) allowed me to get my recently inherited Global Machinery Company 9 inch saw cutting straight. Before it cut at about a twenty degree angle. Definitely not a quality saw, but at least it cuts straight now.
I don't have a bandsaw ... I don't even have a woodshop! Why did I watch this video all the way through? I guess it's just entertaining content on it's own. Keep up the great work.
Thank you for your excellent tutorial for setting up a bandsaw. I have researched and experimented setting up my bandsaw for several years. The method you describe is exactly how I finally figured it out through trial and error. It works perfectly, and, your explanation is straight to the point, simple to understand and covers every detail. No other source, from magazines, videos or woodworking show demos comes close to your video. Excellent.
Thanks for the tips! I have a Delta 14" with variable speed control and a metal cutting blade for aluminum. It works reasonably well but it drifts ever so little. Will attend to it.
Great video. Every bandsaw user should know these things. The best advice is to align the gusset squarely on the center of the upper wheel. The advice of the ancients was to overhang the teeth off the left side thus guaranteeing drift. Placement of the thrust bearing should leave enough, but no more, gap to prevent the teeth from touching the side guides.
Thank you for this video! I’ve watched a couple of vids for calibration but nothing as nicely detailed as this one. You have the “analysis knack” for explaining cause and effect instead of just saying “do this.” Nicely done!!
Thanks for another great video, James! Everybody and their brother, including some big names in woodworking, tells you to adjust the band saw fence to compensate for inevitable drift. A few tell you that drift is caused by worn or defective blades. Michael Fortune's video was the first I saw that points out that you can/should simply rotate the table so the slot(s) and fence are parallel to the blade. Duh! We expect to adjust a table saw table and fence parallel to the blade - why did so many of us not realize the same thing applies to our band saws? As you demonstrate, it works perfectly and it's easy enough, even on my 40-year-old Delta 14". Two other tips I can pass along for those with older, smaller band saws like mine: First, my 14" Delta was top heavy and annoyingly wobbly, especially on a mobile base. So, when I built a long table for my sliding crosscut miter saw a few years back, I made it the same height as my band saw table, and positioned the band saw at the end of the table. Then, I drilled a few holes in the frame and bolted my band saw to the fixed miter saw table. Now my band saw is rock solid and has 12 feet of outfeed support so I can easily rip long boards on the band saw. Second, Alex Snodgrass, in one of his band saw tune-up videos for Carter Products, suggests removing the table each time you change blades so it's easier to adjust those pesky hard-to-reach guides below the table. That turned out to be another "smack my forehead" moment for me. It turns out that removing and replacing the table makes it so much easier to adjust the lower guides that it's actually much faster than trying to do it with the table in place. As a result, I now change blades when necessary instead of forcing a cut with the wrong blade in the saw. Thanks also to the more powerful motor I picked up from Grizzly, my old Delta now performs like a much bigger saw. Of course, when I bought the ubiquitous Delta 14" band saw forty years ago, there weren't too many other options. So, I made these and other upgrades over the years trying to improve its performance. While I'm very pleased with it now, I'm sure that if I totaled it up, I spent as much as or more than I would today on a bigger, better saw like one of your Harveys. ;-) Thanks again, James, and be well!
Nice job, Stump. You covered it. The only small point I can add is make sure you have a good quality blade. Some cheap blades can have inconsistently set teeth. It will be nearly impossible to get such a blade to cut straight. Same as what you said about dull or damaged blades.
Thank you James for the usual good work to put all together. Personally I have made exactly those procedures with my BS for some years but it was a headache and demanded several hours researching and arguing to get that "standard procedure". Your lesson can save lots of time for many people - as well save lots of frustration.
The reason the wheels are crowned is that the crown counter intuitively applies a force towards the center of the crown. The force has to do with the elasticity of the belt/band, and it is much more pronounced for rubber belts. If the saw is not centered on the crown, it should drift towards the center over time, but there are a lot of other factors that may come in to play.
I’ve always been put off by thoughts of big wheels, tires, tension, blade guides, tracking and drift. This video makes adjustment seem much more reasonable (and feasible, even though I realize it will probably take patience and several tries.). I particularly like your simple techniques for measuring tension and thrust bearing setup. There is, of course, still the dangerous step of removing the ties from a new blade. Thanks for the video.
Tool saver! This video got what I thought was a crappy tabletop band saw up and running! At least for 2 cuts before the drive belt disintegrated! Sigh! Guess I’ll get back to that project next week when the new one arrives. But honestly, this is fast becoming my go to channel good tool info!
Thank you for this tutorial. I make do with an 'el cheapo' bandsaw, but don't use it enough buying a higher end unit. With your instructions, I should be able to minimize an otherwise terrible amount of drift.
Right then, thanks for that. The usual plain English. I'm going to the shed tomorrow for a showdown with the beast. I now I feel I have the wherewithal to make it do my bidding. Stewart, south west Australia.
This is exactly how I have always done it....except....I back off all four of the guide blocks/bearings plus the rear bearings. Now adjust the bottom left, than the bottom right. Now the top left and than the top right. finally adjust the rear bearings. Doing it this way eliminates (mostly) going bnack and forth with each conact point. I always finish by using a stone to round the rear edge of the blade so it won't scrape the kerf as it passes through.
lots of good stuff, thanks. I have an old Delta 14 and I'd like to give a shout -out to Cool Blocks. Won't damage blades like metal blocks and much much cheaper than bearings.
I'd love to see a video on setting up cheap tools, like a Harbor Freight bandsaw, for us poors... How to make the best out of less than optimal tools. ^^
This is super helpful! I've just upgraded my little benchtop bandsaw to a bigger one for the first time and have spent an entire day trying to get it perfectly set up, and there's still work to do. I'd love to see a quick video on bandsaw blades - I never had much of a choice in my little 1/3hp machine. Just buy the tiny blades! But now I've got a bunch of options that I don't understand. What are hook vs claw blades? What's a standard blade TPI to get clean straight cuts? (My finish is currently really rough with a new blade) - stuff like that. I'm also totally seeing the value in one of the Hedgehog featherboards, and a decent push stick.
Great video. Thanks for all the great info. I just wish Harvey had a 110v bandsaw, would buy it in a minute. I cannot put in a 220v line without ripping out drywall.
I have a new-ish Delta table top bandsaw and then a really old Craftsman, haven't used either. Tried to use the Delta but could NOT get the blade to stay on. I suspect the blade is toast, turns out it's an odd size that no one has in stock locally, so now I wait for a shipment to come in by mail. The Craftsman is I think a 14 inch but I have yet to even plug it in. Looks like an awesome tool.
▼EXPAND THIS SECTION FOR MORE RESOURCES RELATED TO THIS VIDEO▼
*Tools used in this video:*
Harvey Bandsaw: www.harveywoodworking.com/collections/bandsaws
Fence setup gauge: www.chipsfly.com/bandsaw-companion.html
*Links related to this video:*
-Video about band saw guides: th-cam.com/video/3MPR2kcMhJU/w-d-xo.html
-Video about band saw blade selection: th-cam.com/video/z7n7Gg4QOkc/w-d-xo.html
-Video about choosing a good bandsaw: th-cam.com/video/sUsKYElDKl0/w-d-xo.html
-More videos on our website: stumpynubs.com/
-Subscribe to our e-Magazine: stumpynubs.com/browse-and-subscribe/
-Check out our project plans: stumpynubs.com/product-category/plans/
-Instagram: instagram.com/stumpynubs/
★THIS VIDEO WAS MADE POSSIBLE BY★
Harvey Woodworking Machinery: www.harveywoodworking.com/
*Please help support us by using the link above for a quick look around!*
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Quite informative and very usefully information to use on my saw this week. From a former michigander born and raised now transplanted to Arizona. Thank you!
I’ve got an even better bandsaw tip, just don’t own one
Thank you! Im going to try this on my low-cost WEN this weekend. This bandsaw, by the way, comes with bearing blade guides as standard equipment. No high-cost option necessary.
Thank you! I'm going to try this on my low-cost WEN this weekend. By the way, that bandsaw comes with bearing blade guides as standard equipment. No high-cost option necessary.
Best, most straightforward instruction on truing a bandsaw I've seen. Can't wait to do this to my bandsaw!
Great video. I would just add one small step that has saved me a lot of fidgeting.... back off both the upper and lower guides before setting the tracking and the tension. Once that's where you want it, then set the bearings (or guide blocks) for the clearances you prefer. If you've ever tried to get the tracking right while a bearing is holding back the adjustment, you know why some folks get so frustrated.
Good point, I'll watch that.
Great tip thanks
James I don't even own a band saw but I found this very informative
Of all the things I’ve tried on my saw, from expensive roller guides to a fancy fence, I’ve never beaten the blade drift. And here it was sitting front of me the whole time: rotate the table! How I managed to miss that in every other tips video I’ve watched is beyond me. Can’t wait to get down to the shop and sort it out! Thanks a million!
Nice to know I am not alone, just commented on the same thing. What a laugh after having to live with that for so long because I thought it was just a me thing.
Something I really like about your videos, when I click on the video I go directly to your content. Thank you for that.
If you take a black magic marker and draw lines around the edges of each of your wheel bearings you can easily see when your blade is spinning due to the friction of the blade! A lot easier on old eyes to see!
I have not used my bandsaw for many years, because I could not solve this drifting issue. I have looked and looked online and found no solutions. I will be trying these adjustments this weekend.
Thank you, Thank You, THANK YOU for this video!
Thank you, James. Can’t believe that the instructions on my bandsaw deals with the fence rather than the table to solve drift. One of the best bandsaw brands out there, and still… 🙄
I bought a Harvey bandsaw C14 when you last recommended it, love it. Now the “Black Friday sale” price is up by nearly $800. Crazy Increase in just 1 year
Yeah, Harvey tools are are Made In China, so shipping is a bit of a PITA these days.
This is why I subscribed. I’ve been struggling all year with a new saw and multiple sets of blades, bearings, and belts. Straightforward and 100% effective.
First it was sharpening chisels and plane irons, now it is setting up my bandsaw. EVERY time I watch one of your videos my quality of work improves and my frustration goes down. Thank you so much!
Still the best all-round woodworking channel to watch !! Thanks again !!
Thanks again for another clear, no nonsense video. You have a way of getting the point across without spending too much time on unnecessary material.
This video changed the way my bandsaw performs! I was very discouraged not being able to correct the drift and then you came up with the solution to my problem as my blade was not centered on the wheel. It is now true and I am able to resaw with my bandsaw. Thank you very much!
James, this should be a must-see video for anyone that owns a bandsaw. So much of what you showed here I had to learn out of trial and error and with the help of old-salts' as yourself. One thing I'd like to see or explained is when the upper guide is raised or lowered, it might not track in perfect alignment with the blade. This can cause tracking and/or other issues as well. Some machines allow for adjusting the alignment, such as yours, I believe, but older styles don't, and might require re-adjusting the upper guides when moving the guides from an inch or two from the table to ten or twelve inches up.
If you can adjust the post's alignment to keep it consistent, I'd adjust the bearings each time you raise it high to resaw.
Of all the tools in my shop the bandsaw is definitely the most difficult and tedious to get setup correctly. I have watched many different setup videos. Yours makes the most sense. I’m going to give it a try using your recommendations. Thank you sir!!
My straight knife Jointer would like a word.
Aah, adjust the table to the blade. Amazing how one never stops learning. Thank you for that snippet of info that is worth hours!!!!!!!
Thank you for this. I have a little band saw I bought at an estate sale and this will really help me get it running right.
You clearly put a lot of care and effort into your videos, and they shine for it. Excellent work
Thanks for the clip. I have a table top Ryobi band saw. It took me almost a year to figure out why it wasn't cutting straight. Now I got it. I wish I have watched this presentation much earlier, which would have saved me a lot of time and headache. Everything you said is correct.
i wished to thank you so much !!! I own a bench top band saw for small wood work in my shop since some years. I did in the past some various adjustments but never succeeded to have quasi no drift. Looking at YOUR video, i have understood why !!! I did again various adjustments, revised all settings, reworked the table holes and axis. Now : it's a dream, all work perfectly, quasi NO drift, 90 deg cuts are excellent. As a complement i use a home made micrometric and magnetic fence jig and get excellent results. ie resawing a piece of wood of 50 mm large down to 42 mm exactly at a glance, so easy now. A little hand plane work to adjust and all if fine in no time. So, again thank you, you made my day !!! Every time i will use my and saw, i will think about you ... PS: i did watch may other videos which were great and useful but yours opened my mind on my issue.
I totally agree with all you have said. People who watch this video will be able to set up their machine properly and get excellent results. I have set up machines for people in the Woodturning Club and they are always amazed how good this tool can be. Thank you, Jack from the UK.
You did it again! My bandsaw has been cutting perfectly until two days ago. Last night I was going to search YT for a tuning video I'd seen a year ago, but at the top of my feed was this one. This has happened before, just as I set out to search, you have a new vid on the topic I need. After tweaking the blade on the top wheel and adjusting my rear guide bushing, I was cutting 1/16th inch strips again using my fence! Thx.
I had tracking problems. The first thing I did was come to this video. Thanks for the instruction. I really do appreciate it!
I have setup my saw in the same way as described in this video after watching a similar one by the guy from Carter Guides and my little benchtop 10", 1/2 horse Rikon cuts true and straight through 5" hardwood all day long, these tricks really, really do work for all saws. Thanks!
Most can probably agree that a bandsaw is one of the last investments they make for a shop. Partially because of these fiddly issues you just smashed in a few short minutes!
...and probably because of that I ended up with a bandsaw from the alley.
It wasn't working and the blade was off.
I found that the cover for the blade was bent and the safety switch wouldn't engage!!
It's just a green baby saw, but it works! I look forward to further adjustments and putting it to the test.
....thanks again!
Yes! That final tip about blade guard and guides cannot be said enough!
Thank you! I have my grandpa's old Craftsman bandsaw that is in need of a tune up and this is perfect. I inherited several tools after he passed away and I'm slowly getting them cleaned, tuned, and finding the manuals for them.
I don't have one, but I'm looking for a small one. And this is a great tip. Last time I worked with a bandsaw was 34 years ago. A lot has changed.
Because of you, and this channel, and your recommendations I now have my first real bandsaw I have the Harvey C14 and i love it.
Number one rule use a sharp blade ! If you have to force a cut the blade will wander no matter how you set up the saw ! Excellent video.
I did this to my old Craftsman band saw a little while ago, worth the time and it made it cut so much nicer.
finally a video on bandsaws that will work. when i trained i was taught these steps. one trick i discovered myself for the tension is to pluck it till it becomes a note. just like tuning a guitar for instance.
Thanks James. This is how I setup my 14” Delta, but FYI, Shopsmith bandsaws do not have crowned wheels and the blade is designed to run against “auto-tracking” bearings which position the blade to the back of the wheels. Also, due to the conical shape of the upper wheel and the way that the upper wheel is tensioned on a cantilevered arm, drift is common. I love the Shopsmith bandsaw but it is a different animal. Scott
I recently ordered a Harvey C14. I'm looking forward to applying these and other techniques. Thanks, James.
From the witty title onwards, this is a great video that has to be the clearest and most concise tutorial on setting up bandsaws. Thank you so much James
Hola! For someone like me that does not (yet) have a bandsaw, this video is still very helpful. It is very informative and educational. It also provides insight as to what lies ahead once this tool is in my shop, thanks for this video, take care and have a good one. Adios! 🖐
It's getting a bit repetitions but... Again I say... Great video, packed with useful, pragmatic info. Took me watching many (not so great) videos to learn what James presents in 7 minutes. (wish I had seen this video a while back, would have saved me hours spent on the others). Also.. The only person I have ever seen that states that either of the 2 common ways of setting tracking will work (but not any 'in between' settings). Dead on! Thank you once again Mr Nubs!!
Have a great Christmas and a happy 2022 all at Stumpy Nubs.
Peace, Love and Blessings on you, your families and friends.
Nice tutorial James. Very simple and concise for a novice like myself. Thanks.
This video is exactly what I needed at just the right time. I just bought a used Jet band saw that belonged to my friend's dad who passed away last month. I ordered a new blade for it, and it was just delivered yesterday. So this weekend's project will be installing the new blade and making all of these adjustments that were explained in this video. Thank again for another top notch video!
Hi James, Fantastic video. I have seen many videos on how to set up a bandsaw but this one is the simplest to follow. I have an old DeWalt 3501 and took my time to set it up properly. It has blocks and not bearings so it was great to see you cover this as many videos don't, they just explain bearings.
I just wished you would have posted this video 4 years ago. LOL.
I do as you suggested and check the set up periodically and always after tilting the table.
I make a lot of segmented pens so an accurate set up is vital for me.
Take care James and thanks again for this video.
Cheers, Huw
This was the best, most logical handsaw vid I've ever seen. Thanks.
Thank you for this information. I've considered trashing my old saw, but tomorrow I will try to make these adjustments.
Nice video. Made me go check my big Laguna and I found it had drifted out of alignment. Even for us who've been in the crafts for decades benefit from reviewing this kind of information.
Your wide ranging subject matter on the videos is great. It keeps me intrigued but never bored. Well done, Dr. Hamilton!
I have adjusted my bandsaw before (Jet 18"), but after watching your video and I gave it another go and this time I was way more diligent especially with the lower guides, and now she is purring like a kitten and cutting straight and true. Thanks!!
I have been fighting this for 10 years! Thank you.
Finally someone has explained setup perfectly thank you stumpy great video
I just got the new 16" South Bend bandsaw. I actually had to adjust the top bearing guide system to be parallel and square with the blade. It's something I had never heard of before and was interesting to fix.
Watched one of your other bandsaw set up videos the other day. I have an old Craftsman 12" bandsaw. Used the techniques you went over, and my saw works so much better now
James, thank you so much! I've been tinkering fruitlessly trying to improve my accuracy ever since I bought my first band saw. This has been an enlightenment! Thank you, thank you.
Your advice (and a new blade) allowed me to get my recently inherited Global Machinery Company 9 inch saw cutting straight. Before it cut at about a twenty degree angle. Definitely not a quality saw, but at least it cuts straight now.
I don't have a bandsaw ... I don't even have a woodshop! Why did I watch this video all the way through? I guess it's just entertaining content on it's own. Keep up the great work.
Thank you for your excellent tutorial for setting up a bandsaw. I have researched and experimented setting up my bandsaw for several years. The method you describe is exactly how I finally figured it out through trial and error. It works perfectly, and, your explanation is straight to the point, simple to understand and covers every detail. No other source, from magazines, videos or woodworking show demos comes close to your video. Excellent.
Absolute best demonstration of how to setup a bandsaw! And I am sold on getting my first Harvey Bandsaw, because of you, Stumpy!
Just received my Harvey Ambassador 14” band saw. Gonna use this tutorial to set it up right. Thank you very much
Thanks for the tips! I have a Delta 14" with variable speed control and a metal cutting blade for aluminum. It works reasonably well but it drifts ever so little. Will attend to it.
I love the tip to test tautness - that I should check the blade opposite from the guides.
Great video. Every bandsaw user should know these things. The best advice is to align the gusset squarely on the center of the upper wheel. The advice of the ancients was to overhang the teeth off the left side thus guaranteeing drift. Placement of the thrust bearing should leave enough, but no more, gap to prevent the teeth from touching the side guides.
Thank you James for yet another bucket full of Golden Nugget tips!
Great info. Thanks. Sometimes the obvious solutions. Like adjusting the table, are the hardest to see.
Thank you for this video! I’ve watched a couple of vids for calibration but nothing as nicely detailed as this one. You have the “analysis knack” for explaining cause and effect instead of just saying “do this.” Nicely done!!
I will be using alllll these tips to check my new mini benchtop band saw tomorrow!
Beautiful video! Thank you so much for your dedication & careful descriptions. Just inherited grandpa's bandsaw and need to dial it in.
Thanks for another great video, James! Everybody and their brother, including some big names in woodworking, tells you to adjust the band saw fence to compensate for inevitable drift. A few tell you that drift is caused by worn or defective blades. Michael Fortune's video was the first I saw that points out that you can/should simply rotate the table so the slot(s) and fence are parallel to the blade. Duh! We expect to adjust a table saw table and fence parallel to the blade - why did so many of us not realize the same thing applies to our band saws? As you demonstrate, it works perfectly and it's easy enough, even on my 40-year-old Delta 14". Two other tips I can pass along for those with older, smaller band saws like mine: First, my 14" Delta was top heavy and annoyingly wobbly, especially on a mobile base. So, when I built a long table for my sliding crosscut miter saw a few years back, I made it the same height as my band saw table, and positioned the band saw at the end of the table. Then, I drilled a few holes in the frame and bolted my band saw to the fixed miter saw table. Now my band saw is rock solid and has 12 feet of outfeed support so I can easily rip long boards on the band saw. Second, Alex Snodgrass, in one of his band saw tune-up videos for Carter Products, suggests removing the table each time you change blades so it's easier to adjust those pesky hard-to-reach guides below the table. That turned out to be another "smack my forehead" moment for me. It turns out that removing and replacing the table makes it so much easier to adjust the lower guides that it's actually much faster than trying to do it with the table in place. As a result, I now change blades when necessary instead of forcing a cut with the wrong blade in the saw. Thanks also to the more powerful motor I picked up from Grizzly, my old Delta now performs like a much bigger saw. Of course, when I bought the ubiquitous Delta 14" band saw forty years ago, there weren't too many other options. So, I made these and other upgrades over the years trying to improve its performance. While I'm very pleased with it now, I'm sure that if I totaled it up, I spent as much as or more than I would today on a bigger, better saw like one of your Harveys. ;-) Thanks again, James, and be well!
Nice job, Stump. You covered it. The only small point I can add is make sure you have a good quality blade. Some cheap blades can have inconsistently set teeth. It will be nearly impossible to get such a blade to cut straight. Same as what you said about dull or damaged blades.
He’s way ahead of you. You might want to check out his last video where he recommends carbide-tipped bandsaw blades
Thank you James for the usual good work to put all together. Personally I have made exactly those procedures with my BS for some years but it was a headache and demanded several hours researching and arguing to get that "standard procedure". Your lesson can save lots of time for many people - as well save lots of frustration.
The reason the wheels are crowned is that the crown counter intuitively applies a force towards the center of the crown. The force has to do with the elasticity of the belt/band, and it is much more pronounced for rubber belts. If the saw is not centered on the crown, it should drift towards the center over time, but there are a lot of other factors that may come in to play.
Excellent information. I'm certainly going to use this information to tune my bandsaw.
Cheers Jim, this video is going into my archive next to the Alex Snodgrass ones!
I’ve always been put off by thoughts of big wheels, tires, tension, blade guides, tracking and drift. This video makes adjustment seem much more reasonable (and feasible, even though I realize it will probably take patience and several tries.). I particularly like your simple techniques for measuring tension and thrust bearing setup. There is, of course, still the dangerous step of removing the ties from a new blade. Thanks for the video.
I saw a video (can't recall who made it) in which they simply dropped the blade on the floor, teeth uppermost, to uncoil it!
@@lafamillecarrington Stand back!
Thank you your video was a great help my 1st job tomorrow
Regards
Steve UK London
Timely. I just bought a new- to- me Grizzly bandsaw yesterday.
Very nice, concise explanation. Thanks Stumpy.
Great video. I have used playing cards when adjusting my guide blocks
Thanks for another great video. I’m heading to the shop now to adjust my bandsaw.
Thx for this video it reminded me all of the importance of the blade 👍🏼❤️ It would be nice to have a video about sharpening a bandsaw blade 👏👍🏼🇨🇦
Tool saver! This video got what I thought was a crappy tabletop band saw up and running! At least for 2 cuts before the drive belt disintegrated! Sigh! Guess I’ll get back to that project next week when the new one arrives. But honestly, this is fast becoming my go to channel good tool info!
Thank you for this tutorial.
I make do with an 'el cheapo' bandsaw, but don't use it enough buying a higher end unit.
With your instructions, I should be able to minimize an otherwise terrible amount of drift.
Even a cheap saw can be made to perform better with a good tune-up :)
Best video on this subject by far.
clean and understandable explanation. 10/10
The best explanation around! Thank you!
Right then, thanks for that. The usual plain English. I'm going to the shed tomorrow for a showdown with the beast. I now I feel I have the wherewithal to make it do my bidding. Stewart, south west Australia.
This tutorial is simply superb!
Great explanation Stumpy!! This is my new go to reference for proper bandsaw setup.
Good job! I just bought my first bandsaw and this helps a lot.
This is exactly how I have always done it....except....I back off all four of the guide blocks/bearings plus the rear bearings. Now adjust the bottom left, than the bottom right. Now the top left and than the top right. finally adjust the rear bearings. Doing it this way eliminates (mostly) going bnack and forth with each conact point. I always finish by using a stone to round the rear edge of the blade so it won't scrape the kerf as it passes through.
Thank you for showing in detail. This helps so much. Thanks again.
This video is was so informative I can imagine myself using this guide on my imaginary bandsaw when it starts to drift...
lots of good stuff, thanks.
I have an old Delta 14 and I'd like to give a shout -out to Cool Blocks. Won't damage blades like metal blocks and much much cheaper than bearings.
I'd love to see a video on setting up cheap tools, like a Harbor Freight bandsaw, for us poors... How to make the best out of less than optimal tools. ^^
Good stuff James...I think that I'll start with a new blade and follow your tutorial and see if I can get this old Powermatic cutting accurately again
Very useful reminders, Jim. Thank you.
A lot of very good info and having done this, my saw is now spot on. Thanks. Keep up the good videos, the info is alway appreciated. Cheers, Tom
This is super helpful! I've just upgraded my little benchtop bandsaw to a bigger one for the first time and have spent an entire day trying to get it perfectly set up, and there's still work to do.
I'd love to see a quick video on bandsaw blades - I never had much of a choice in my little 1/3hp machine. Just buy the tiny blades! But now I've got a bunch of options that I don't understand. What are hook vs claw blades? What's a standard blade TPI to get clean straight cuts? (My finish is currently really rough with a new blade) - stuff like that.
I'm also totally seeing the value in one of the Hedgehog featherboards, and a decent push stick.
There is a link to a video about bandsaw blades in the notes below this video.
Great video. Thanks for all the great info. I just wish Harvey had a 110v bandsaw, would buy it in a minute. I cannot put in a 220v line without ripping out drywall.
Great video... nice work on the close ups ....... straight forward and concise.....😁😀😎
I have a new-ish Delta table top bandsaw and then a really old Craftsman, haven't used either. Tried to use the Delta but could NOT get the blade to stay on. I suspect the blade is toast, turns out it's an odd size that no one has in stock locally, so now I wait for a shipment to come in by mail. The Craftsman is I think a 14 inch but I have yet to even plug it in. Looks like an awesome tool.