Hi guys, I'm new to scrolling and need some technical advice on my saw's configuration.
The saw is a "TTB545SSW"
When I run the saw, the blade has about 2mm of front to rear movement. It looks as if the upper arm and lower arm are either not truly parallel or are slightly different lengths. The blade feels like it I'd hammering it's blades into the wood in an odd way.
It cuts straight lines and large radius curves well, but I cannot get it to make tight turns even in thin plywood.
I have turned the saw over to see the linkages and I can see some kind of mechanism about half way down the lower arm but I cannot access it easily.
I don't think I am using the saw incorrectly as I am not forcing the blade or bending it. The table is definitely at 0 degrees.
This problem really makes the workpiece shudder at times when I'm attempting curves even with firm down pressure on the wood. I think it would be totally impossible to do inlay work with this much run-out on the fore-and-aft axis.
Can you please give me some advice on what I should do?
The saw is a "TTB545SSW"
When I run the saw, the blade has about 2mm of front to rear movement. It looks as if the upper arm and lower arm are either not truly parallel or are slightly different lengths. The blade feels like it I'd hammering it's blades into the wood in an odd way.
It cuts straight lines and large radius curves well, but I cannot get it to make tight turns even in thin plywood.
I have turned the saw over to see the linkages and I can see some kind of mechanism about half way down the lower arm but I cannot access it easily.
I don't think I am using the saw incorrectly as I am not forcing the blade or bending it. The table is definitely at 0 degrees.
This problem really makes the workpiece shudder at times when I'm attempting curves even with firm down pressure on the wood. I think it would be totally impossible to do inlay work with this much run-out on the fore-and-aft axis.
Can you please give me some advice on what I should do?