Best tool for cutting 3mm Land Rover Chassis, not grinder.

Best tool for cutting 3mm Land Rover Chassis, not grinder.

Author
Discussion

mattrosersv

Original Poster:

579 posts

230 months

Thursday 14th May 2015
quotequote all
I have just welded a new rear chassis section to my Land Rover, but now have some more difficult areas to get to in order to weld up.

Obviously a grinder is the way forward for most stuff and has been fine so far, but it is too big to get to some areas I need to sort which leaves me either having to cut off larger sections than I would like for access, or buy a new tool......

What would you recommend? I have been considering an air die grinder and discs (not sure my compressor would be up to the air flow though) and electric reciprocal saws.

Cheers,

Matt

mygoldfishbowl

3,701 posts

143 months

Thursday 14th May 2015
quotequote all
I do have quite a large compressor & have used these in the past with some success. I've also used hacksaw blades with mole grips for a handle on occasions just to get by. If all that fails though I have cut back more than I wanted to. Not a lot of help I know but sometimes I think you've just got to cut out what ever you need to.



Edited by mygoldfishbowl on Thursday 14th May 21:51

phillpot

17,115 posts

183 months

Thursday 14th May 2015
quotequote all



Would a Plasma cutter be any good?

mygoldfishbowl

3,701 posts

143 months

Friday 15th May 2015
quotequote all
Yes they would but the problem for me is cost. Probably £500 plus for something half decent that I may use once every two or three years, can't justify it. frown

Peanut Gallery

2,427 posts

110 months

Friday 15th May 2015
quotequote all
http://www.screwfix.com/p/energer-enb518htl-200w-m...

I have one similar to that, the blade it came with was JUST long enough to get through my exhaust while it was still in place.

Mr Classic

224 posts

119 months

Friday 15th May 2015
quotequote all
Oxy?

G600

1,479 posts

187 months

Sunday 17th May 2015
quotequote all
mygoldfishbowl said:
I've also used hacksaw blades with mole grips for a handle on occasions just to get by.
Sounds like you need a pad saw.

mattrosersv

Original Poster:

579 posts

230 months

Monday 18th May 2015
quotequote all
So, ended up using my trusty grinder + a borrowed reciprocal saw + some new Bosch blades and ended up chopping good bits out to get the access I needed.

The only problem with the reciprocal saw is that I keep bending the blades when the saw pops out the cut, or hits the opposing part of the chassis frown

I do have a cheap plasma, but the cuts are so rough they need grinding back anyway.

Cheers,

Matt