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Minnesota Shop Reconditions Big Sawmill Blades
From Alaska to Nebraska, sawmill owners seek out Jim Voigt and his saw blade reconditioning service. Customers have good reason to come to him. Voigt charges an average of $150 to hammer a warped circular blade back in shape, a huge savings over the $2,000 cost of a new blade.
  “I was 15 when I started hammering saws,” says Voigt, who is now 58. “It’s Old World craftsmanship. I was fortunate to step in to it with an uncle who was very good at it.”
  He and his two brothers work out of the same building their father and uncle built in Rice, Minn., in 1945. While the shop has modern tools, it still has the old blacksmith shop including a forge and a line shaft that runs a Little Giant power hammer, grinder and drill press. The business is well-known as the place to go with blades that have warped and don’t run straight.
  “My job is to re-tension the steel, so that when they turn it, at say 600 rpm’s, it’s a stiff piece of metal,” Voigt says.
  He has a special anvil, several hammers in different weights and shapes, and straight edges from 6 in. to 4 ft. long. Voigt figures out where the blade is stretched and hammers other areas to make it even with the right tension.
  “My uncle used to say he didn’t charge for hammering. He charged for knowing where to hit,” Voigt says.
  When reconditioned right, saw blades can last for years. Voigt has worked on blades that are older than him. The biggest blade he ever worked on was more than 6 ft. in dia., but they average between 50 and 60 in.
  He gets a lot of business from mills in Minnesota, Iowa, Wisconsin and the Dakotas, but customers also ship blades to him and have driven up from as far away as Nebraska. After getting the blade to room temperature, it takes about 3 hrs. to recondition it.
  As many sawmills go out of business, Voigt has noticed fewer blades coming in, but there’s still plenty of demand as there are only a handful of shops that recondition blades. The Voigts also weld band saw blades and do farm repair including sharpening plow lathes and a variety of machine work.
  Contact: FARM SHOW Followup, Rice Blacksmith Saw and Machine, P.O. Box 175, E. Main Street, Rice, Minn. 56367 (ph 877 224-5251).


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2011 - Volume #35, Issue #6