I bought this thing yesterday and spent all day putting it together as per the manual. I then tried to adjust the rip fence because it wasn't square and that's where the 'fun' began!
It turns out (confirmed by Axminster) that you can't actually adjust the angle of the fence on this saw without adjusting the rip rail. The Rip fence is fixed to the magnifying glass thing by four bolts on rails (2 of which can be seen in the pic). These allow you to set the zero mark but don't allow the angle of the fence to be adjusted beyond a minute amount.
If you look at the Pic1, you can see how much the Rip rail has to be pulled away from the table on the left hand side to make the Rip fence line up perfectly with the slot on the table!
The second photo shows the view from the left side of the table - you can see just how little of the Rip rail is actually being held in by the screw.
I've already been back to the shop with the fence and they replaced it after looking at it and spotting that it was faulty - that one was even worse!
The fence is firm when fastened but approach your point from the left, lock the handle and the fence will pull itself to the right and still be 1mm off at the top of the table. Approach from the right and it won't correct itself at all, happily wonky and several mm out!
Honestly, I expected much better from these saws. £530 is not peanuts and these faults reek of poor QC and poor design. I dont know if I should just take it back for a refund and get something else or let them try and replace it. They're talking about sending out a new Rip rail but I cant see what that would achieve - it looks fine to me. The real problem is that there is no independent adjustment for the fence and there should be on a machine costing this much.
How they think this is OK is beyond me.
It turns out (confirmed by Axminster) that you can't actually adjust the angle of the fence on this saw without adjusting the rip rail. The Rip fence is fixed to the magnifying glass thing by four bolts on rails (2 of which can be seen in the pic). These allow you to set the zero mark but don't allow the angle of the fence to be adjusted beyond a minute amount.
If you look at the Pic1, you can see how much the Rip rail has to be pulled away from the table on the left hand side to make the Rip fence line up perfectly with the slot on the table!
The second photo shows the view from the left side of the table - you can see just how little of the Rip rail is actually being held in by the screw.
I've already been back to the shop with the fence and they replaced it after looking at it and spotting that it was faulty - that one was even worse!
The fence is firm when fastened but approach your point from the left, lock the handle and the fence will pull itself to the right and still be 1mm off at the top of the table. Approach from the right and it won't correct itself at all, happily wonky and several mm out!
Honestly, I expected much better from these saws. £530 is not peanuts and these faults reek of poor QC and poor design. I dont know if I should just take it back for a refund and get something else or let them try and replace it. They're talking about sending out a new Rip rail but I cant see what that would achieve - it looks fine to me. The real problem is that there is no independent adjustment for the fence and there should be on a machine costing this much.
How they think this is OK is beyond me.