nejanimb wrote:What wood could you possibly be using that's so hard to cut? It seems ot me, any wood that you would need a razor saw to cut, would not be appropriate for SO structures... No?
Not really commenting on what wood appropriate to the event, just how to cut the wood described safest, fastest, most accurately, etc.
And just my experience, but:
I find large soft balsa easier/more accurate/quicker/less damage to cut with a razor saw than knife. I can cut soft balsa quickly with a sharp knife and crush the ends terribly. I can take many cuts with a sharp knife and not damage it. Or I can cut it quickly, accurately, and without damage with a razor saw faster than a knife. Dull blades are right out for soft balsa for anything other than destroying good wood.
Almost any size but the smallest bass I can cut it much faster with the razor saw, and even with the small stuff I don't save much time with a knife. For any size at all, the razor saw beats a knife in bass or spruce by miles. Frankly for large hard balsa a razor saw beats a knife.
sewforlife wrote: <SNIP>It wasn't exactly the hardness of the wood, it was more like the bass was really dense, and my blade was pretty dull, also my patience was wearing out.
<SNIP>
Hardness and density tend to go hand in hand with wood.
NEVER use a dull blade, leads to excess force which just leads to cuts. Almost every cut I've had with an X-Acto was due to a dull blade, not a fresh sharp one. Plus it tends to butcher the wood. I buy blades in the hundred pack now. Not so much because it saves money (it does) but to make sure I'm never tempted to use a dull one because I'm down to my last blade. Blades are cheap, cuts painful, stitches painful and expensive! I could replace every blade I've used in the past 40 years ( I couldn't say fi... fif... fift... a whol bunch of years of life) by avoiding ONE trip to an emergency room (spurting blood in front of a Wright Stuff class and 7 stitches!).
When patience is out, its time for a break (that emergency room trip wasted a LOT more time). The rest of my injuries with X-Actos (not related to dull blades) were directly related to being in a hurry. Heck, even some of the dull blade cuts were a result of being too impatient to change a blade.
Be safe, change blades often
Jeff Anderson
Livonia, MI