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Types of Hand Saw

Back saws are short saws with reinforced blades used for fine, straight cuts in miter boxes. Bow saws are long-bladed crosscut saws used outdoors to remove material while pushing and pulling. Coping saws have thin, narrow blades ideal for trim work and intricate cuts in a variety of materials.

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Daisuke Inoue
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
548 views2 pages

Types of Hand Saw

Back saws are short saws with reinforced blades used for fine, straight cuts in miter boxes. Bow saws are long-bladed crosscut saws used outdoors to remove material while pushing and pulling. Coping saws have thin, narrow blades ideal for trim work and intricate cuts in a variety of materials.

Uploaded by

Daisuke Inoue
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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TYPES OF HAND SAW

Back Saw
A back saw is a relatively short saw with a narrow blade that is reinforced along the
upper edge, giving it the name. Back saws are commonly used with miter boxes and in
other applications which require a consistently fine, straight cut. Back saws may also be
called miter saws or tenon saws, depending on saw design, intended use, and region.

Bow Saw
Another type of crosscut saw, the bow saw is more at home outdoors than
inside. It uses a relatively long blade with numerous crosscut teeth designed
to remove material while pushing and pulling.

Coping Saw

With a thin, narrow blade, the coping saw is ideal for trim work, scrolling, and
any other cutting which requires precision and intricate cuts. Coping saws can
be used to cut a wide variety of materials, and can be found in the toolkits of
everyone from carpenters and plumbers to toy and furniture makers.
Fret Saw
Most closely resembling a coping saw, the fret saw has a long, thin blade for making
intricate cuts. The fret saw has a longer, larger frame that allows cutting farther from the
outer edges, but the blade cannot be rotated, which results in more tedious and difficult
cutting positions when performing intricate scrollwork.

Crosscut Saw
Designed specifically for rough cutting wood, a crosscut saw has a comparatively thick
blade, with large, beveled teeth. Traditional 2-man crosscut saws (aka felling saws)
have a handle on each end and are meant to be used by two people to cut across
(perpendicular) the grain of timber.

Hacksaw
Perfect for cutting pipes and tubing, the hacksaw is one of the most common saw types.
They are lightweight and versatile, able to cut through wood, metal, plastic and other
materials using material-specific cutting blades with a tooth count ranging from about 18
to 32 per inch.

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