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Beam Saw Advices

7/7/16       
anthonyg Member

Hi all
hope your having a great day
i own a carpentry and
i am looking to open a melamine cutting and edge banding services.

i am looking to get a beam saw as well as an edgebander

i had the casadei busellato sales over they gave me there prices (beam saw axo 300 and the i did not get the edge bender name)

as well as the holzher sales and got an idea about their new beam saw the tectra and HOLZ-HER Edgebander AURIGA 1308 XL

so i am looking for some advice of users of beam saw or edge bander of those 2 company

and any other advice for a startup company for melamine cutting services

hope you can help me with that
thank you all in advance

7/7/16       #2: Beam Saw Advices ...
Larry

Forget the beam saw and get a router. Unless you are going to stack cut, meaning multiple identical sheets, a router is faster than a saw. And it isn't a one trick pony. We have been running a Schelling saw for many years great saw, excellent support.

7/7/16       #3: Beam Saw Advices ...
anthonyg Member

thank you for your advice
i would like to add that i work with big European boards like 366*183 cm
the cnc nesting table cost double than a good beam saw
so i am looking to start with a beam saw
and on the future get a small cnc router

7/8/16       #4: Beam Saw Advices ...
Larry

If all you are doing is cutting stacks of rectangles the beam saw works. That panel size is only 1' wider and the same length than we normally use in the states. Routers to handle that size are readily available.

7/11/16       #5: Beam Saw Advices ...
anthonyg Member

can a flat table handle a melamine cutting service?

7/11/16       #6: Beam Saw Advices ...
Larry

Depends on what your service offers. If you are single sheet cutting, a router is just as fast or faster than a panel saw. If you are cutting shapes other than rectangles the router is faster or maybe the only good solution. If you customers will pay you more to do any detailing (curves, grooves, holes, edge work....)
What are your customers doing with the piles of rectangular parts? Do they then detail them as a secondary operation?
It all comes down to who your customers are and what they need. The beam saw can't be beat for stack cutting rectangles. Both saws and routers are available in a wide range of prices.

7/12/16       #7: Beam Saw Advices ...
anthonyg Member

Thank you for your reply
In the industrial area near me their is no nesting cnc router services all panel cutting services are done on beam saws

I will need to find a way to introduce this type of cnc nesting services and to keep the same price rate of the beam saw services (any advice will be great)

All carpenter and beam saw service users usualy cut 1 sheet at a time

And i will check if i can use this cnc to make my wall panels designs

Thank you for your help


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