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Author: Subject: Cutting ABS plastic
Colnago_Man

posted on 24/2/09 at 01:06 PM Reply With Quote
Cutting ABS plastic

Having just recieved my ABS Plastic from Bay Plastics for my tunnel top I was wondering what the best technique is for cutting it?

Hacksaw? Jigsaw? Sharpe knife?

Its 3mm thick by the way.

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Mr Whippy

posted on 24/2/09 at 01:10 PM Reply With Quote
jig saw, fine blade, very low speed

coarse glass paper on a block off wood to get a straight edge. Put two layers of masking tape over at least 2 inches where you are cutting to prevent scratching the surface

[Edited on 24/2/09 by Mr Whippy]





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dinosaurjuice

posted on 24/2/09 at 01:15 PM Reply With Quote
if your doing quite a lot its well worth getting a proper plastic cutting blade made by bosch or whatever.

edit: for a jigsaw

[Edited on 24/2/09 by dinosaurjuice]






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Colnago_Man

posted on 24/2/09 at 01:22 PM Reply With Quote
Thanks guys, should I cut on the top of the plastic or on the back side, obvisouly the jigsaw can mark the plastic if your not carefull or i've not used masking tape, but does the plastic splinter a little?
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serieslandy

posted on 24/2/09 at 01:31 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Colnago_Man
Thanks guys, should I cut on the top of the plastic or on the back side, obvisouly the jigsaw can mark the plastic if your not carefull or i've not used masking tape, but does the plastic splinter a little?
It all depends on the cutting blade. So if it cuts on the down stroke, from the top. If the blade cuts on the up stroke then cut from the back.

[Edited on 24/2/09 by serieslandy]

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Slater

posted on 24/2/09 at 02:15 PM Reply With Quote
Just score it a few times with stanley knife then bend, it will snap with a good clean edge. Practice on an offcut first.

Only works for straight cuts though.





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MikeRJ

posted on 24/2/09 at 04:08 PM Reply With Quote
Fine toothed jigsaw blades aren't so good for ABS, they generate enough heat to fuse the plastic back together behind the blade. A fairly coarse blade works best IME, and don't try force the jigsaw to speed up the cut.

ABS edges can be made pretty tidy just by dragging a very sharp blade along them, but a flat sanding block and suitably fine paper will give the best finish.

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locoR1

posted on 24/2/09 at 04:42 PM Reply With Quote
A jigsaw just makes a mess have a look at this thread : HERE





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stevebubs

posted on 24/2/09 at 05:18 PM Reply With Quote
I'd use a dremel cutting wheel and then file/sand it back
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trextr7monkey

posted on 24/2/09 at 07:46 PM Reply With Quote
At work we just treat it like hard board - fine toothed bandsaw (reserved for plastics only as it knocks the set off the blades) , circular saw for the thicker stuff at home wejust use a jigsaw steadily!





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flak monkey

posted on 24/2/09 at 07:51 PM Reply With Quote
I used Piranah jigsaw blades to cut mine with a low speed. Very coarse and sharp, designed for rapid wood cutting.

No messiness or hassle.

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roadrunner

posted on 24/2/09 at 08:03 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Slater
Just score it a few times with stanley knife then bend, it will snap with a good clean edge. Practice on an offcut first.

Only works for straight cuts though.

I managed to cut my dash out using a sharp stanley knife, thats curved, in fact i did all my panels with a knife, then used a small block plane to trim then finished with sand paper.

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roadrunner

posted on 24/2/09 at 08:06 PM Reply With Quote
And i found it quicker and easier if you used a straight edge.
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Colnago_Man

posted on 13/3/09 at 12:46 PM Reply With Quote
Just to add closure to my own thread - most techniques cut this plastic very cleanly. A hacksaw or jigsaw at low speed produced a decent if a little wobbly cut.
But using a sharp knife and scoring the plastic a number of times along the cut easily gave the cleanest staightest cut.
It is also the easiest to perform as it can be difficult to clamp a large sheet of plastic is such a position that it can be cut easily with the jigsaw.
Using the sharp knife technique I just put it down on the living room carpet.

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