• Re: Drywall on the Table Saw

    From Darthnips@21:1/5 to All on Wed Feb 8 00:45:03 2023
    Right anytime your cutting drywall or messing with anything dusty you should be wearing a nice Filter mask to keep the dust out of your lungs an nose. But I would suggest cutting it with a table saw bagging it all up in a ziplock bag an then splash a
    little on your nose an get in your car a speed up an down the Main Street in your town with your head out the window ufo ufo. Then when you get pulled over offer the officer a nice line hahaha jk jk. Ya don’t use a table saw like the one person said
    you will screw your saw up. Hopefully I made it to the party in time an the comments still ongoing pun ended

    --
    For full context, visit https://www.homeownershub.com/woodworking/drywall-on-the-table-saw-239438-.htm

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From John Grossbohlin@21:1/5 to Darthnips on Tue Feb 7 18:20:49 2023
    On Tuesday, February 7, 2023 at 7:45:08 PM UTC-5, Darthnips wrote:
    Right anytime your cutting drywall or messing with anything dusty you should be wearing a nice Filter mask to keep the dust out of your lungs an nose. But I would suggest cutting it with a table saw bagging it all up in a ziplock bag an then splash a
    little on your nose an get in your car a speed up an down the Main Street in your town with your head out the window ufo ufo. Then when you get pulled over offer the officer a nice line hahaha jk jk. Ya don’t use a table saw like the one person said
    you will screw your saw up. Hopefully I made it to the party in time an the comments still ongoing pun ended

    --
    For full context, visit https://www.homeownershub.com/woodworking/drywall-on-the-table-saw-239438-.htm

    It's no better an idea now than it was in 2004...

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Michael@21:1/5 to gros...@gmail.com on Tue Feb 7 18:24:42 2023
    On Tuesday, February 7, 2023 at 8:20:53 PM UTC-6, gros...@gmail.com wrote:
    On Tuesday, February 7, 2023 at 7:45:08 PM UTC-5, Darthnips wrote:
    Right anytime your cutting drywall or messing with anything dusty you should be wearing a nice Filter mask to keep the dust out of your lungs an nose. But I would suggest cutting it with a table saw bagging it all up in a ziplock bag an then splash a
    little on your nose an get in your car a speed up an down the Main Street in your town with your head out the window ufo ufo. Then when you get pulled over offer the officer a nice line hahaha jk jk. Ya don’t use a table saw like the one person said
    you will screw your saw up. Hopefully I made it to the party in time an the comments still ongoing pun ended

    --
    For full context, visit https://www.homeownershub.com/woodworking/drywall-on-the-table-saw-239438-.htm
    It's no better an idea now than it was in 2004...

    Ha ha.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Markem618@21:1/5 to a1ac6d957ab5bf77875da055e66123e7@ex on Tue Feb 7 21:55:17 2023
    On Wed, 08 Feb 2023 00:45:03 +0000, Darthnips <a1ac6d957ab5bf77875da055e66123e7@example.com> wrote:

    Hopefully I made it to the party in time an the comments still ongoing pun ended

    Nope eighteen years to late, but new ones may come up now.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From DerbyDad03@21:1/5 to John Grossbohlin on Wed Feb 8 14:09:01 2023
    On Tuesday, February 7, 2023 at 9:20:53 PM UTC-5, John Grossbohlin wrote:
    On Tuesday, February 7, 2023 at 7:45:08 PM UTC-5, Darthnips wrote:
    Right anytime your cutting drywall or messing with anything dusty you should be wearing a nice Filter mask to keep the dust out of your lungs an nose. But I would suggest cutting it with a table saw bagging it all up in a ziplock bag an then splash a
    little on your nose an get in your car a speed up an down the Main Street in your town with your head out the window ufo ufo. Then when you get pulled over offer the officer a nice line hahaha jk jk. Ya don’t use a table saw like the one person said
    you will screw your saw up. Hopefully I made it to the party in time an the comments still ongoing pun ended

    --
    For full context, visit https://www.homeownershub.com/woodworking/drywall-on-the-table-saw-239438-.htm
    It's no better an idea now than it was in 2004...

    The only time I use my table saw to cut drywall is when I need to cut an opening for
    a receptacle, switch, light fixture, etc.

    I try to do that early in the day, when I'm fresh. After a hard day's work, I sometimes have
    trouble holding the table saw level. Ceilings aren't so bad, but holding it up against the wall
    gets tiring.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Markem618@21:1/5 to teamarrows@eznet.net on Wed Feb 8 16:12:29 2023
    On Wed, 8 Feb 2023 14:09:01 -0800 (PST), DerbyDad03
    <teamarrows@eznet.net> wrote:

    On Tuesday, February 7, 2023 at 9:20:53 PM UTC-5, John Grossbohlin wrote:
    On Tuesday, February 7, 2023 at 7:45:08 PM UTC-5, Darthnips wrote:
    Right anytime your cutting drywall or messing with anything dusty you should be wearing a nice Filter mask to keep the dust out of your lungs an nose. But I would suggest cutting it with a table saw bagging it all up in a ziplock bag an then splash
    a little on your nose an get in your car a speed up an down the Main Street in your town with your head out the window ufo ufo. Then when you get pulled over offer the officer a nice line hahaha jk jk. Ya don’t use a table saw like the one person said
    you will screw your saw up. Hopefully I made it to the party in time an the comments still ongoing pun ended

    --
    For full context, visit https://www.homeownershub.com/woodworking/drywall-on-the-table-saw-239438-.htm
    It's no better an idea now than it was in 2004...

    The only time I use my table saw to cut drywall is when I need to cut an opening for
    a receptacle, switch, light fixture, etc.

    I try to do that early in the day, when I'm fresh. After a hard day's work, I sometimes have
    trouble holding the table saw level. Ceilings aren't so bad, but holding it up against the wall
    gets tiring.

    That Gamma radiation treatment worked huh?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From John Grossbohlin@21:1/5 to All on Wed Feb 8 17:29:38 2023
    On Wednesday, February 8, 2023 at 5:09:04 PM UTC-5, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Tuesday, February 7, 2023 at 9:20:53 PM UTC-5, John Grossbohlin wrote:
    On Tuesday, February 7, 2023 at 7:45:08 PM UTC-5, Darthnips wrote:
    Right anytime your cutting drywall or messing with anything dusty you should be wearing a nice Filter mask to keep the dust out of your lungs an nose. But I would suggest cutting it with a table saw bagging it all up in a ziplock bag an then splash
    a little on your nose an get in your car a speed up an down the Main Street in your town with your head out the window ufo ufo. Then when you get pulled over offer the officer a nice line hahaha jk jk. Ya don’t use a table saw like the one person said
    you will screw your saw up. Hopefully I made it to the party in time an the comments still ongoing pun ended

    --
    For full context, visit https://www.homeownershub.com/woodworking/drywall-on-the-table-saw-239438-.htm
    It's no better an idea now than it was in 2004...
    The only time I use my table saw to cut drywall is when I need to cut an opening for
    a receptacle, switch, light fixture, etc.

    I try to do that early in the day, when I'm fresh. After a hard day's work, I sometimes have
    trouble holding the table saw level. Ceilings aren't so bad, but holding it up against the wall
    gets tiring.

    I seem to recall a Fine Homebuilding article where they had plans for a fixture to hold a bench top table saw for such uses... counter balanced to take the load off.

    Just remember to let it fall if you loose your grip. Back in the '60s my father was a tool and die maker. One of his coworkers came in one morning with his hand all bandaged up and sans some fingers. His bench top table saw wasn't clamped down and fell
    off the bench while he was cutting. He tried to catch it.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From knuttle@21:1/5 to All on Wed Feb 8 22:14:44 2023
    T24gMi84LzIwMjMgNTowOSBQTSwgRGVyYnlEYWQwMyB3cm90ZToNCj4gT24gVHVlc2RheSwg RmVicnVhcnkgNywgMjAyMyBhdCA5OjIwOjUzIFBNIFVUQy01LCBKb2huIEdyb3NzYm9obGlu IHdyb3RlOg0KPj4gT24gVHVlc2RheSwgRmVicnVhcnkgNywgMjAyMyBhdCA3OjQ1OjA4IFBN IFVUQy01LCBEYXJ0aG5pcHMgd3JvdGU6DQo+Pj4gUmlnaHQgYW55dGltZSB5b3VyIGN1dHRp bmcgZHJ5d2FsbCBvciBtZXNzaW5nIHdpdGggYW55dGhpbmcgZHVzdHkgeW91IHNob3VsZCBi ZSB3ZWFyaW5nIGEgbmljZSBGaWx0ZXIgbWFzayB0byBrZWVwIHRoZSBkdXN0IG91dCBvZiB5 b3VyIGx1bmdzIGFuIG5vc2UuIEJ1dCBJIHdvdWxkIHN1Z2dlc3QgY3V0dGluZyBpdCB3aXRo IGEgdGFibGUgc2F3IGJhZ2dpbmcgaXQgYWxsIHVwIGluIGEgemlwbG9jayBiYWcgYW4gdGhl biBzcGxhc2ggYSBsaXR0bGUgb24geW91ciBub3NlIGFuIGdldCBpbiB5b3VyIGNhciBhIHNw ZWVkIHVwIGFuIGRvd24gdGhlIE1haW4gU3RyZWV0IGluIHlvdXIgdG93biB3aXRoIHlvdXIg aGVhZCBvdXQgdGhlIHdpbmRvdyB1Zm8gdWZvLiBUaGVuIHdoZW4geW91IGdldCBwdWxsZWQg b3ZlciBvZmZlciB0aGUgb2ZmaWNlciBhIG5pY2UgbGluZSBoYWhhaGEgamsgamsuIFlhIGRv buKAmXQgdXNlIGEgdGFibGUgc2F3IGxpa2UgdGhlIG9uZSBwZXJzb24gc2FpZCB5b3Ugd2ls bCBzY3JldyB5b3VyIHNhdyB1cC4gSG9wZWZ1bGx5IEkgbWFkZSBpdCB0byB0aGUgcGFydHkg aW4gdGltZSBhbiB0aGUgY29tbWVudHMgc3RpbGwgb25nb2luZyBwdW4gZW5kZWQNCj4+Pg0K Pj4+IC0tIA0KPj4+IEZvciBmdWxsIGNvbnRleHQsIHZpc2l0IGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmhvbWVv d25lcnNodWIuY29tL3dvb2R3b3JraW5nL2RyeXdhbGwtb24tdGhlLXRhYmxlLXNhdy0yMzk0 MzgtLmh0bQ0KPj4gSXQncyBubyBiZXR0ZXIgYW4gaWRlYSBub3cgdGhhbiBpdCB3YXMgaW4g MjAwNC4uLg0KPiANCj4gVGhlIG9ubHkgdGltZSBJIHVzZSBteSB0YWJsZSBzYXcgdG8gY3V0 IGRyeXdhbGwgaXMgd2hlbiBJIG5lZWQgdG8gY3V0IGFuIG9wZW5pbmcgZm9yDQo+IGEgcmVj ZXB0YWNsZSwgc3dpdGNoLCBsaWdodCBmaXh0dXJlLCBldGMuDQo+IA0KPiBJIHRyeSB0byBk byB0aGF0IGVhcmx5IGluIHRoZSBkYXksIHdoZW4gSSdtIGZyZXNoLiBBZnRlciBhIGhhcmQg ZGF5J3Mgd29yaywgSSBzb21ldGltZXMgaGF2ZQ0KPiB0cm91YmxlIGhvbGRpbmcgdGhlIHRh YmxlIHNhdyBsZXZlbC4gQ2VpbGluZ3MgYXJlbid0IHNvIGJhZCwgYnV0IGhvbGRpbmcgaXQg dXAgYWdhaW5zdCB0aGUgd2FsbA0KPiBnZXRzIHRpcmluZy4NCkkgYWdyZWUgd2l0aCB0aGUg YWJvdmUsIGJ1dCBwZXJzb25hbGx5IEkgdXNlIGEgc2hhcnAga25pZmUsIHNjb3JlIHRoZSAN CnN1cmZhY2Ugb2YgdGhlIGRyeSB3YWxsLCBicmVhaywgYW5kIGN1dC4gIFNpZ25pZmljYW50 bHkgbGVzcyBkdXN0LiAgIEZvciANCnJlY2VwdGFjbGVzLCBsaWdodCBmaXh0dXJlcywgSSB1 c2UgYSBzcGlyYWwgYml0IGluIG15IGRyZW1tZWxsIHJvdGFyeSB0b29sDQo=

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From DerbyDad03@21:1/5 to knuttle on Wed Feb 8 19:42:19 2023
    On Wednesday, February 8, 2023 at 10:14:50 PM UTC-5, knuttle wrote:
    On 2/8/2023 5:09 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Tuesday, February 7, 2023 at 9:20:53 PM UTC-5, John Grossbohlin wrote:
    On Tuesday, February 7, 2023 at 7:45:08 PM UTC-5, Darthnips wrote:
    Right anytime your cutting drywall or messing with anything dusty you should be wearing a nice Filter mask to keep the dust out of your lungs an nose. But I would suggest cutting it with a table saw bagging it all up in a ziplock bag an then splash
    a little on your nose an get in your car a speed up an down the Main Street in your town with your head out the window ufo ufo. Then when you get pulled over offer the officer a nice line hahaha jk jk. Ya don’t use a table saw like the one person said
    you will screw your saw up. Hopefully I made it to the party in time an the comments still ongoing pun ended

    --
    For full context, visit https://www.homeownershub.com/woodworking/drywall-on-the-table-saw-239438-.htm
    It's no better an idea now than it was in 2004...

    The only time I use my table saw to cut drywall is when I need to cut an opening for
    a receptacle, switch, light fixture, etc.

    I try to do that early in the day, when I'm fresh. After a hard day's work, I sometimes have
    trouble holding the table saw level. Ceilings aren't so bad, but holding it up against the wall
    gets tiring.
    I agree with the above, but personally I use a sharp knife, score the surface of the dry wall, break, and cut. Significantly less dust. For receptacles, light fixtures, I use a spiral bit in my dremmell rotary tool

    I soak the drywall with a garden hose before I cut it. Much less dust.

    (If we had pasta for dinner, I save water by using what's in the pot.)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Bill@21:1/5 to All on Thu Feb 9 13:27:33 2023
    On 2/8/2023 5:09 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
    On Tuesday, February 7, 2023 at 9:20:53 PM UTC-5, John Grossbohlin wrote:
    On Tuesday, February 7, 2023 at 7:45:08 PM UTC-5, Darthnips wrote:
    Right anytime your cutting drywall or messing with anything dusty you should be wearing a nice Filter mask to keep the dust out of your lungs an nose. But I would suggest cutting it with a table saw bagging it all up in a ziplock bag an then splash a
    little on your nose an get in your car a speed up an down the Main Street in your town with your head out the window ufo ufo. Then when you get pulled over offer the officer a nice line hahaha jk jk. Ya don’t use a table saw like the one person said
    you will screw your saw up. Hopefully I made it to the party in time an the comments still ongoing pun ended

    --
    For full context, visit https://www.homeownershub.com/woodworking/drywall-on-the-table-saw-239438-.htm
    It's no better an idea now than it was in 2004...

    The only time I use my table saw to cut drywall is when I need to cut an opening for
    a receptacle, switch, light fixture, etc.

    I try to do that early in the day, when I'm fresh. After a hard day's work, I sometimes have
    trouble holding the table saw level. Ceilings aren't so bad, but holding it up against the wall
    gets tiring.

    Thanks! That was the first laugh I've had all day! : )

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)