ForΒ [Turbo Conquering Mega Eagle], the question was simple: Do I spend 20 minutes slaving away in front of a bandsaw to cut a bunch of short brass rods into even shorter pieces of brass rod? Or do I spend daysΒ designing and building an automatic cutoff sawΒ to do the same job? The answer is obvious.
Itβs only at the end of the video below that [TCME] reveals the need for these brass bits: theyβre for riveting together the handles of knives he makes and sells. That makes the effort that went into his βAuto Mega Cut-O-Maticβ a little easier to swallow, although we still think he ran afoul ofΒ this relevant XKCD. The saw is built out of scraps and odd bits using angle iron as a base and an electric die grinder to spin a cut-off wheel. A small gear motor feeds the brass rod down a guide tube until it hits a microswitch stop, which starts the cut cycle. Another motor swivels the saw to make the cut then moves it out of the way so the stock can advance. The impressive thing is that the only control mechanism is a series of microswitches, cams, levers, and springsΒ β no Arduino needed. Heck, thereβs not even a 555, which we find a refreshing change.
Yes, itβs overkill, but he had fun and made something pretty ingenious. [Turbo Conquering Mega Eagle] always has something interesting going on in the shop, and we couldnβt help but notice him usingΒ his aluminum-melting tea kettleΒ to make some parts for this build.
Source: AUTOMATIC CUT-OFF SAW TAKES THE TEDIUM OUT OF A TWENTY-MINUTE JOB