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screen printing => General Screen Printing => Topic started by: ZooCity on November 22, 2011, 12:34:13 AM
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...if you could just narrow that platen by 2" without having to take it off the press. The answer is yes, yes you can.
(http://i941.photobucket.com/albums/ad253/Z00_CITY/cutplaten.jpg)
You'll need a little help from these guys
(http://i941.photobucket.com/albums/ad253/Z00_CITY/sawandtallboy.jpg)
...and the shop vac to clean up that mess you just made. But dammit, you've got the right size platen now.
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Get er done!
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Shop vac running DURING the cutting might have been advised. :)
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See kids.. this is what malt liquor makes a mildly intelligent grown man do..
At least use the right blade next time.. :o
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But what do you do when you need one 2" wider?
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But what do you do when you need one 2" wider?
Play the video backwards!
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Duct tape and JB weld.
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Power Tools & Beer!
God Bless America!
P.S. Try putting the shavings in some ink. Might make a pretty cool design? (watch the temperature might melt them?)
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that`s what i call a bold move
but is still gotta round the rough edges don`t you?
try using a router it`ll work for that
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Just dawned on me that you cut up a metal platten, are you crazy? Those circular saws are not very accurate either , cut out 4 platts from a sheet of mdf board and you'll get 3 slightly different sizes lol either that or I suck at cutting.
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You suck at cutting! JK
Actually if you set up a fence and clamp it down a circular saw can be very accurate. More than enough for what we do.
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Well, it's not that you necessarily suck at cutting, but like so many other things, experience can count for a lot. Some folks can follow a straight guide line better than others, but that can often be fixed by the use of a correctly placed, clamped wood, plastic, or metal guide to which the side of the saw can ride against.
The other common problem with accuracy to newbie saw-ers, is not compensating for the kerf (the width of the material we now see as sawdust or metal shavings)
Instant edit since last post:
Mike has the same idea with his "fence"
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by the way -who the hell drinks canned beer?! . .that's the problem zoo. . .
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In defense of cans, they have their place. They chill really fast. While camping, a soak in a cool stream does not take long to reach the good stuff inside, and if one has access to to a shallow bowl and a few ice cubes, and a little water, a can be chilled in less than a minute, spinning it in the icy water.
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ok, canned has it's place, I guess it's not as bad as draft. . .holy smokes, last time I had a drafter, I had to pop a squat for a week. . .
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In defense of cans, they have their place. They chill really fast. While camping, a soak in a cool stream does not take long to reach the good stuff inside, and if one has access to to a shallow bowl and a few ice cubes, and a little water, a can be chilled in less than a minute, spinning it in the icy water.
Add some rock salt to that ice water and it will get colder even faster.
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Like with an ice cream maker. Now you could even make a malt beverage slushie.
(http://www.google.com/url?source=imglanding&ct=img&q=http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-ZNzgOkpqbuE/Ta6AXDOut_I/AAAAAAAAA40/17kr1-9AHzY/s1600/Apu-n.gif&sa=X&ei=Df7LTqbHGMXniAKphbHECw&ved=0CAsQ8wc&usg=AFQjCNERF7iRFpurPbo4XVfXE453s0uteQ)
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Bad draught is a result of unclean beer lines. Quality establishments would not let this happen.
Canned beer is making a comeback, at least here on the west coast. More and more microbrews
are being canned as opposed to bottled. Same rules as any beer applies, don't get it hot, don't
swing the temperature too much, etc. A quality beer tastes as good at room temperature as it does
cold.
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I actually like my beer not freezing cold. crappy beer needs to be uber cold to cover the flavor. good beer should be served slightly colder than red wine IMHO.
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Bingo Brad. Cold = numb taste buds.
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Well, it's not that you necessarily suck at cutting, but like so many other things, experience can count for a lot. Some folks can follow a straight guide line better than others, but that can often be fixed by the use of a correctly placed, clamped wood, plastic, or metal guide to which the side of the saw can ride against.
The other common problem with accuracy to newbie saw-ers, is not compensating for the kerf (the width of the material we now see as sawdust or metal shavings)
Instant edit since last post:
Mike has the same idea with his "fence"
One of the funniest newbie wood worker mistakes is when lets say they have a, eight foot 2x4 and they want three peices all 2 feet long, they grab the tape measure and measure out 2 feet mark, 4 feet mark and 6 feet and mark. They then cut the three marks and wonder why two of the pieces are so short!
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you measure?
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I get annoyed when I see a contractor making a mistake, point it out and they look at me since I am a woman like I am one that doesn't know what I am talking about. I just walk away and tell them they can fork over the money for their own mistake then because I warned them:)
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Now first off, Oly is not malt liquor. What do I seem like a malt liquor guy or something? (not saying I'm not) I do firmly agree on the beer temperature to quality correlation.
Second, we can't recycle glass here. Yes, that is dumber than hell and I hate throwing glass out all time, just feels stupid. It typically needs to be shipped so far that the fuel used outweighs the benefits of recycling. The Target store up here does let folks load up glass on their empty trucks heading back West to drop off at recycling centers on the way and there are a couple of glass crushers around the area who make product out of the bottles that's used inside concrete and whatnot. So even our finer beers brewed here in town, and fine they are, come in cans. Olympia is not one of those beers but it's pretty decent for $5 for a sixer of tall cans. We also use a lot of cans here because we spend a lot of outdoors and specifically river time, busted glass in yer foot or waders is a buzz kill and swigging bottle on the river is bad form.
Last off, I've cut aluminum platens, rubber and all, in a more proper fashion on a table saw and it seems most any carbide tipped blade works quite well. The platen I hacked up above with the 'ol circ saw is actually fairly smooth. You want to be sure your blade is spinning away from you though, lest you get impaled by a spear of aluminum.
You all don't like my cut job? Come on, I drew some lines on there and yes I know what a kerf is. I even 'rounded' the corners if you look at the pic. :o
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I don't know, I liked it.
Great pic.
:)
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In defense of cans, they have their place. They chill really fast. While camping, a soak in a cool stream does not take long to reach the good stuff inside, and if one has access to to a shallow bowl and a few ice cubes, and a little water, a can be chilled in less than a minute, spinning it in the icy water.
Hmmm. Andy, I'm guessing you were in Nam?
They had plenty of beer and big blocks of ice. Spin the can for 30 seconds and it's cold!
(no I wasn't in Nam, just a little to young, but I knew a lot that were)