WARNING: CUT HAZARD: Keep hands away from blade. With your scroll saw you should be able to cut a straight
or curved line with ease. Most beginners will experience blade wandering; however, they eventually learn to control it
as they become more familiar with the machine. Use scrap material to practice cuts before starting a project. This
enables you to develop your own way of cutting and you will find out what you can and cannot do with your saw.
Always hold the work firmly against the table and do not feed the workpiece too fast while cutting. Feed the workpiece
only fast enough so that the blade will cut. Scroll saws cut faster across the grain than they do with the grain. Allow for
this tendency when cutting patterns that shift rather quickly from with-the-grain cuts to cross-grain cuts.
Make "relief" cuts before cutting long curves and never attempt to cut a curve that is too tight for the blade being used.
Inside cutting is where the blade must be threaded through a hole in the workpiece. The Shopmaster 16" Scroll Saw
has the capability of performing this operation quickly and easily as follows:
Inside cutting can be accomplished quickly with the saw.
In Fig. 36, the operator has just completed one of the
inside cuts and must move to the next hole.
Loosen lock handle (A) Fig. 37, and raise the spring
holddown (B). Release blade tension by moving tension
lever (C) forward and loosen upper blade holder by
moving lever (D) to the rear as shown. This will release
the blade (E). Insert the blade (E) into the next hole in the
pattern, as shown.
Place blade (E) Fig. 38, back into the upper blade holder
and tighten blade by moving lever (D) forward. Move
tension lever (C) to the rear as shown and lower spring
holddown (B). You are ready to make the next inside cut.
FOLLOWING A LINE
INSIDE CUTTING
16
Fig. 36
D
B
Fig. 37
C
B
Fig. 38
C
A
E
D
E