Last edited by Dunckelman; 04-18-2019 at 13:04.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0184KGOR0...9-5707d913d0fd
The pair I have is from Clauss- recommended by Intimidator
Gone through a good dozen spools of amsteel without dulling.
Just Bill, I like your reported wearability on the scissors but a roller (or razor type knife) might work better for me.
With scissors I hold the Amsteal with one hand, pull the strands out (and taut) with the other hand, holds the scissors in the other hand and cut ... what, too many hands! (or not enough). At this location, the only OFLA cutter that requires a shipping fee (and it about equal to price of cutter) is the recommended 28mm size. Neither Home Depot or Lowe's carry it - nor do the local dealers listed for this area on OFLA's web page - isn't life just like that
Last edited by cougarmeat; 04-19-2019 at 13:02.
In order to see what few have seen, you must go where few have gone. And DO what few have done.
I'm in the ceramic knife camp. Just have to be careful not to drop it or it might break in two. Generally a good idea not to drop any knives though.
For a clean cut I use my Light Sabre.
Hanging in the woods, paddlin and catching trout- My kind of living...
https://www.amazon.com/OLFA-Rotary-C...81732861&psc=1
for prime shipping not bad.
I use the fiskars cutters and they seem to hold up fine. I keep meaning to try the Olfa but never seem to.
Fiskars can more easily be found at local stores too (craft or big box) I think you have to hit an actual sewing machine store for the Olfa.
Since a rotary cutter is handy for general sewing anyway- seems like a good option and no reason not to use what you got. I could easily see a blade getting through a hammock or two and a few amsteel projects with out serious wear. Course same goes for a basic knife.
For me- I tend to bulk cut most stuff (30-50 layers of fabric) so the rotary blade is typically close to shot by the time that's done.
I was using Titanium scissors and a sharpener- but that got old after a bit as doing bulk cuts required stopping every dozen or two cuts. It also tended to do badly when trimming the individual tapers... they got a bit mangled or folded vs cut. I have rotary cut those before but they tend to get driven into the cutting mat after awhile as the mat wears down.
The scissors upgrade helped with that quite a bit, it's also just the right size if I want to make a marker cut in a stack of fabric.
All that said- you're talking doing a few cuts vs doing a good bit of volume.
With the 'precision' splicing for the bridges... I double clamp my stuff anyway along the edge of my sewing table when cutting... so I always have the requisite third hand needed
A 16' 1x4 works too if you have room in your garage- all the cordage can get a bit squirmy and sensitive to tension and the only reliable method I've found is to clamp with squeeze clamps on each end. If you pull too tight- the clamp will slip. So you can get the right tension to get the number right without straying too far either way. Not to mention the board is handy for making a template for repeats.
Just Bill, yep - that's the link. It opens up to the 45mm cutter that has free shipping with an order over $25 (never a problem). But when you click on the 28mm option, the shipping changes to $10.51 shipping - for a total of around $22.
Then there are the options for "free shipping" from other suppliers if you pay $21.95 for the cutter.
Maybe I'll contact Amazon and ask why the 60mm model is completely free shipping, the 48mm is free shipping if the total order is over $25, and the 28mm model is a fixed $10.51 shipping. All the same manufacturer (so same source?), so why different shipping policies to customer?
In order to see what few have seen, you must go where few have gone. And DO what few have done.
Moderator - this was a duplicate post of the one above. Please remove.
In order to see what few have seen, you must go where few have gone. And DO what few have done.
I wouldn't think there is anything magical about the brand of rotary cutter, or the size of the blade. I suggest that it is the quality of the blades you put on ANY rotary cutter that will make/break its ability to perform!
(besides, rotary cutters are just easier to use than scissors anyway... AND you can replace the blades when dull)
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