Metal cutting?

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Nibor

Bewildered
Location
Accrington
Dremel
 

Dadam

Senior Member
Location
SW Leeds
If it's thin enough can you fold the edge over rather than cutting it? Might be easier to make a neater edge and less likely to slice your digits open. Clamp in a vice or with a bunch of clamps along a straight edge. Clamps or mole grips to hold the rest of the plate while you bend it over.
 

Profpointy

Legendary Member
the book of words from my track saw
(a variant of hand-held saw) talks of a particular blade being suitable for aluminium and another for 1/8" mild steel.

Providing you can clamp the work down safely and use a guide to run the saw against, assuming it's not a track saw per se I recon that's your best bet, even if you have to buy a suitable blade. ... assuming you have the saw already. If not, then a track saw is very useful.

Hacksaw or jigsaw with suitable blade would be my 2nd choice
 

Adam4868

Guru
HI All,

As you may be aware from another thread I have got myself a tow bar bike carrier. I asked the lease company for a letter so that I could get a duplicate rear plate for the back of the carrier and they were kind enough to just post me a full set of aluminium plates.

The drawback is that they are the type of plate that has a lip at the bottom to advertise the lease company. The lip is too big to fit in the plate holder.
My first thought is to somehow file down the lip to take off about 5mm. The question is how?

The alternative is to drill some holes and bolt the plate to the holder although it will look a bit ugly at the bottom. This is obviously the easy option as I just need to mark the holes and get an hss drill bit and then some appropriate bolts.

Any thoughts folks?
I'm crap at visualizing what you mean,how thick is the Ally ? Tin snips unless your competent with a bit of tin bashing won't cut it neat.Possible to flatten the lip with a square faced hammer and dolly/piece of metal.Sand it with a flap wheel in a grinder,although ally will clog it up fast.Sure you'll get it sorted either way.File it and break a sweat man !
 

Dave7

Legendary Member
Location
Cheshire
Surely a cheap reciprocating saw will do it.
You will likely get blades suitable for metal and wood.
 

presta

Guru
Tinsnips will give you a straighter smoother edge than any of the alternatives being suggested on here, and without all the time spent fettling a sawn edge afterwards: it takes a few seconds with the back of a scalpel blade to deburr the sharp side of a sheared edge.
 
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