Apologies, Imgur is not letting me upload images tonight, words will need to do -
I'm trying to rip some recycled pine boards up the middle for a project. The boards are 1800mm (~6ft) long and 25mm (~1inch) thick. I know that any other power saw would be better but I have a Ryobi battery powered jigsaw with a stack of decent cutting blades. The jigsaw has a guide which allows you to screw in bits of wood to make it longer, which I have done.
No matter how I approach this the jigsaw blade slowly bends itself to the right as I go, eventually jumping out of its guide. I've now got several wonky cuts at each end I'll have to sand down and patch somehow and two bent jigsaw blades.
I was concerned it was the jigsaws guide being off but I've taken steps to ensure it's square and Ive also checked and rechecked that the jigsaw itself is set to 90°. I've also tried at the lowest setting and it's still wavering off.
Timber is from an old bedframe Ive been up and down the thing and removed all the screws and nails.
The jigsaw goes through thin ply, 5mm aluminium and a much softer pine board of similar thickness without issue, but I've not got anything else super long to do a long test cut with.
Any troubleshooting ideas? I can go find a makers space with a table saw but I was hoping to get this done at home.
Tennonboy t1_j5nxnd4 wrote
Jigsaws when cutting down the grain, will naturally follow the grain your never going to get a decent cut with what is effectively the wrong tool to do the job. Circular saw is the answer