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Thread: Corrugated roofing shear - GIF

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    Supporting Member Altair's Avatar
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    Corrugated roofing shear - GIF

    Corrugated roofing shear.




    Previously:

    Shearing a long metal sheet - GIF
    Rotary shear - video
    Industrial shear - GIF
    Metal cutting shears - video
    Throatless shear - GIF
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    mwmkravchenko (Dec 31, 2021)

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    Supporting Member mwmkravchenko's Avatar
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    Sure beats a skill saw that I used to use!

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    Supporting Member Frank S's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by mwmkravchenko View Post
    Sure beats a skill saw that I used to use!
    Standing there watching the 18-year-old apprentice do the work is how I would prefer it done, but I usually score a line with a box knife clamp 2 pair of vice grips 1 to either side of the line step on one pair and pull up rapidly with the other pair, the sheets will usually tear along the line. it works quite well with corrugated sheet metal from Home gone to pot or Highes not so much for real commercial R panels
    Never try to tell me it can't be done
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    Supporting Member mwmkravchenko's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Frank S View Post
    Standing there watching the 18-year-old apprentice do the work is how I would prefer it done, but I usually score a line with a box knife clamp 2 pair of vice grips 1 to either side of the line step on one pair and pull up rapidly with the other pair, the sheets will usually tear along the line. it works quite well with corrugated sheet metal from Home gone to pot or Highes not so much for real commercial R panels
    The key is getting it done. The score and tear works. But I don't like the finish left behind as much. Like you said, Depends on the gage of the material you have at hand. I've used shears, aviation snips. Knife like you, although I just bent it up and down until there's metal fatigue and you have a cut.

    Home Despot is up here in Canada to, Lowes as well. Been through Texas in the early 80's when there was record cold that winter. But don't remember Highes. I'll look it up.

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    Supporting Member Frank S's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by mwmkravchenko View Post
    The key is getting it done. The score and tear works. But I don't like the finish left behind as much. Like you said, Depends on the gage of the material you have at hand. I've used shears, aviation snips. Knife like you, although I just bent it up and down until there's metal fatigue and you have a cut.

    Home Despot is up here in Canada to, Lowes as well. Been through Texas in the early 80's when there was record cold that winter. But don't remember Highes. I'll look it up.
    Highs is my name for lowes, the nearest 84 lumber is nowhere to be found anymore, there are no Minnards, the only other places are a Higgenbotham's and rarely any bargains to be found there it Seams that Pate's hardware& lumber are direct competition for ACE and TrueValue 'novalue' that leaves only Builder's Supply. but that is a 230 mile drive 1 way I have mesquite trees that are 40 feet tall or more with 12" trunks but they don't grow straight enough to make lumber out of so I haven't bothered building a saw mill for that reason. I'm content in burning 2 to 3 cords every winter from just the dead ones.
    Never try to tell me it can't be done
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    Supporting Member mwmkravchenko's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Frank S View Post
    Highs is my name for lowes, the nearest 84 lumber is nowhere to be found anymore, there are no Minnards, the only other places are a Higgenbotham's and rarely any bargains to be found there it Seams that Pate's hardware& lumber are direct competition for ACE and TrueValue 'novalue' that leaves only Builder's Supply. but that is a 230 mile drive 1 way I have mesquite trees that are 40 feet tall or more with 12" trunks but they don't grow straight enough to make lumber out of so I haven't bothered building a saw mill for that reason. I'm content in burning 2 to 3 cords every winter from just the dead ones.
    OK makes sense. I grew up in a similar area in Manitoba. There's only one large city in the whole province. And we were 72 miles from the outskirts.

    I have 7 acres here. Fully wooded. Some poplar, cedar, a few Oak, many Ash that are dying from the emerald ash borer, and Sugar Maples. I am contemplating making a mill. So many ash are sitting and almost dead. I worked on a mill as a young man. ANd periodically on my current property with a contract sawyer.

    Kind of special to make your own lumber and use it. But as you say it has to be worth doing it.

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