Reciprocating saw

Example of a variable-speed, reciprocating saw
Reciprocating saw at the Roscheider Hof Open Air Museum
Reciprocating saws have many uses; here it is cutting through hard-to-remove nails in a staircase

A reciprocating saw is a type of saw in which the cutting action is achieved through a push and pull reciprocating motion of the blade.

The term reciprocating saw is commonly assigned to a type of saw used in construction and demolition work. This type of saw, also known as a recip saw, Sawzall (a trademark of the Milwaukee Electric Tool Company) has a large blade resembling that of a jigsaw and a handle oriented to allow the saw to be used comfortably on vertical surfaces. The typical style of this saw has a foot at the base of the blade, also similar to a jigsaw. The user rests this foot against the surface being cut so that the tendency of the blade to push away from or pull towards the cut as the blade travels through its cycle can be countered.

Design

Designs range widely in power, speed, and features, from less powerful portable, handheld models that are usually shaped like a cordless drill, to high-power, high-speed, corded models designed for heavy construction and demolition work. Modern reciprocating saws almost all have variable speed, either through trigger sensitivity or through a dial. Another feature that has become important to the way these saws are used is the inclusion of an orbital action. This action consists of oscillating the traversed reciprocation in up and down fashion (perpendicular to the motion of cut) causing the tip of the blade to move in an oval pattern, up and down as well as back and forth. This feature is primarily for wood, allowing quick cuts.

The reciprocating saw is a popular tool used by many window fitters, construction workers and emergency rescue services. Variants and accessories are available for specialized uses, such as clamps and long blades for cutting large pipe.[1][2]

Blades are available for a variety of materials and uses. Common types include metal cutting blades, wood cutting blades, blades for composites, for drywall, and other materials. Many of these blade types have a variety of tooth designs intended for special purposes, such as tree-limb cutting, demolition work, clean cutting, or contaminated materials. Abrasive coated blades are also available for hard materials like tile and stone.[3]

Reciprocating saw is also called hackzall saw when it accepts both Hackzall and Sawzall style blades. [4] The term reciprocating saw (also oscillating saw) is also applied generically to any saw which cuts with a back and forth motion. These include:

Powered reciprocating tools are also found in surgery and dental surgery, where they are used in operations that require cutting or grinding of bone.

Mechanism

Main article: Reciprocating motion
Mechanism of Milwaukee Sawzall reciprocating saw showing helical drive gear, fit of mechanism in tool, and a sequence of the operation of the swash plate to drive the reciprocating action.

The reciprocating action may be produced several ways. A crank[5] or Scotch yoke type drive may be used, a swash plate[6] type drive, a captive cam or eccentric, barrel cam,[7] or other rotary to linear drive. Modern tools are built with variants of all of these mechanisms. Eccentric cam, crank and scotch yoke drives need balance weights to reduce vibration in the plane of the rotating element, and may still exhibit vibration that is objectionable to a user of a handheld saw and can lead to difficulty in controlling a cut. The swash plate drive has the advantage that there is little rotational out of balance, so the principal vibration is in line with the blade. This is generally controllable by keeping the foot of a handheld tool against the work.

See also

References

  1. Fein, Reciprocating Saws for Pipe
  2. Reciprocating Saw Accessories
  3. Home Depot, How to Find an Ideal Reciprocating Saw Blade
  4. SawReviewed, Milwaukee 2625 20 M18 18-Volt Hackzall Reciprocating Saw
  5. Papworth (1958), Portable Power Reciprocating Saw
  6. Ristow (1960), Portable Reciprocating Saw
  7. Schmidt (1949), Power Conversion Attachment

External links

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