Is it a 250W motor on the Einhell bandsaw and is the blade still the one that it came with, or did you replace it for a better one? Do you think your circular saw is struggling with that oak as well, judging by the impact that it’s having on the battery?
Is your blade dull? Some einhell band blades are made of low quality soft cheap Chinese metal or steel…. Or the motor is too weak for the density or your wood?
Yeah, battery powered circular saws are not really up for making rip cuts. The Einhell could perform better with a heftier, 3-4 tpi / skip tooth blade, the one you've got on is better for curvy cuts in sheet material or similar.
Dude, ive got the same band saw, its horrificly bad, ya not doing anything wrong its just massively rubbish, i aint got around to changing mine yet, but its not long for my workshop, thats for definite
Maybe a small wedge what's been cut, perhaps spring is trapping the blade...
Is it a 250W motor on the Einhell bandsaw and is the blade still the one that it came with, or did you replace it for a better one? Do you think your circular saw is struggling with that oak as well, judging by the impact that it’s having on the battery?
Yes to all of the above. New blade now so we'll see how it goes
Is your blade dull? Some einhell band blades are made of low quality soft cheap Chinese metal or steel…. Or the motor is too weak for the density or your wood?
Yeah, battery powered circular saws are not really up for making rip cuts. The Einhell could perform better with a heftier, 3-4 tpi / skip tooth blade, the one you've got on is better for curvy cuts in sheet material or similar.
Cool. The blade actually snapped the other day so I bought a new one. We'll see how it fares.
Dude, ive got the same band saw, its horrificly bad, ya not doing anything wrong its just massively rubbish, i aint got around to changing mine yet, but its not long for my workshop, thats for definite
With every cheap machine always change the blade, every time.