Two finger catch on Keller power hacksaw - why two?

I just picked up an old Keller mechanical lift hacksaw. It's a very handy size for the garage and takes blades a little over a foot long and it's very heavy for it's size. It looks complete and lifts on the return stroke using cam, rack and gear and two finger catch. I fingured everything out except why they use two fingers for the mechanical lift mechanism.

Thanks.

Reply to
kndroy
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wrote: (clip) I fingured everything out except why they use two fingers for the mechanical lift mechanism. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ You're talking about a pair of pawls running side-by-side on a single ratchet? If you look closely, I think you'll find that the tips of the pawls are spaced half a tooth apart. One pawl does the lifting until the cut sinks by half a tooth, and then the other pawl takes over. This gives you the same result as having the ratchet twice as fine, but without the fine teeth. More rugged.

Reply to
Leo Lichtman

Thanks for explaining that. The one thing that bothers me about this saw is when it is done cutting it drops very hard and seems like the pawls and sprocket are getting abused at the time they release.

Thanks.

Reply to
kndroy

I don't know about Kellers, but isn't there usually a hydraulic damper ?

In some designs there's a near-vertical cylinder with a short barrel-shaped piston, hung from a pivot on the hacksaw frame. Oil in the cylinder is forced through a hole in the piston, slightly damping the descent of the hacksaw.

There's also a pin mounted in the bottom of the cylinder. When the hacksaw cuts through and the piston drops, this blocks most of the piston's oil hole, increasing the damping for the bottom of the fall.

Reply to
Andy Dingley

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