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#1
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Re: Plactions treads and rubbing alchohol
When I was on teams who used this material we always marked the back side of it and cut it tread side down on a bandsaw.
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#2
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Re: Plactions treads and rubbing alchohol
The few times that I've cut Blue Nitrile, I've used a bandsaw as well. I've found that the only way to get a remotely straight cut was to clam a piece of angle (or other material) to the table of the saw to act as a guide.
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#3
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Re: Plactions treads and rubbing alchohol
I was hoping to avoid using a bandsaw... My shaky fingers often mess up cuts, and those burs really are annoying. How much more advantage does Blue Nitrile have over roughtop or Colson?
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#4
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Re: Plactions treads and rubbing alchohol
We often use a box cutter or razor blade (along with a clamped-down straight edge) to cut our tread to length and width. It isn't too difficult.
Based on qualitative observations (and a few quantitative experiments), blue nitrile outgrips Colson wheels on carpet (particular with wide, small diameter wheels), but on HDPE and polycarbonate surfaces, the Colsons grip a bit better. Adding custom tread patterns to the Colsons supposedly closes the gap with roughtop tread on carpet. |
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#5
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Re: Plactions treads and rubbing alchohol
Quote:
If you don't think it's worth the hassle, just use roughtop/colsons. You're not going to loose any needed power. |
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#6
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Re: Plactions treads and rubbing alchohol
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#7
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Re: Plactions treads and rubbing alchohol
Of course, the only thing preventing me from using colsons is the time and financial cost of making your own live axle hubs for them.
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