Rhossydd
Established Member
One of the things I really wanted to be able to do when I bought a table saw was cut clean tenon shoulders. With the standard guarding on the Axminster TS200 that's impossible.
So a new steel riving knife made to just below the maximum height of the cut was relatively easy. Guarding seemed more complicated.
What I thought might work nicely is shown below. An A4 sheet of 6mm thick acrylic sheet bolted onto the top of the standard fence.
I'd expect to use this in conjunction with the sliding table fence seen in the bottom of the shot, so the rip fence is just being used as a guard support.
There are still some refinements to complete, rounding off the edges and corners, but the whole assembly is remarkably solid.
Any comments on this ?
Even at maximum height the blade is just clear of the guard, so it could be used for more than just tenoning. The clear screen would certainly make seeing what you'd cutting much easier. It will obviously need a cunningly shaped push stick to work through under the panel if I choose to rip anything with it on.
So a new steel riving knife made to just below the maximum height of the cut was relatively easy. Guarding seemed more complicated.
What I thought might work nicely is shown below. An A4 sheet of 6mm thick acrylic sheet bolted onto the top of the standard fence.
There are still some refinements to complete, rounding off the edges and corners, but the whole assembly is remarkably solid.
Any comments on this ?
Even at maximum height the blade is just clear of the guard, so it could be used for more than just tenoning. The clear screen would certainly make seeing what you'd cutting much easier. It will obviously need a cunningly shaped push stick to work through under the panel if I choose to rip anything with it on.