andy king
Established Member
Hi Ivan,
I'm not sure why the DeWalt demo saw wasn't cutting well, the model i had on test worked really well, I've used it since to cut some apertures in teak faced ply for some lockers in a friends boat and the cuts were clean as a whistle both long and crossgrain.
It could be the adjusters to snug the saw to the rail were not set properly, with one a little more nipped than the other the saw is effectively sliding along at a very slight angle so the back of the blade is dragging along the kefr line and could cause some chipping or feathering. This is just a suggestion mind you...
EI would say that even with a guide rail it's still not good practice to cut from the face side on laminated worktops if you want a really clean finish as the upcut action of the blade will try and rip the laminate away from the substrate. I wouldn't be over keen on dragging a circular saw back for a scoring cut either, even with a minimal projection. It's much the same as climb cutting with a router, you are encouraging the machine to draw itself back quickly and that could result in an accident as it can race and jump the cut.
The spring guard should protect the blade if it does happen, but a split second of the blade not being covered is enough to do plenty of damage to flesh.
cheers,
Andy
I'm not sure why the DeWalt demo saw wasn't cutting well, the model i had on test worked really well, I've used it since to cut some apertures in teak faced ply for some lockers in a friends boat and the cuts were clean as a whistle both long and crossgrain.
It could be the adjusters to snug the saw to the rail were not set properly, with one a little more nipped than the other the saw is effectively sliding along at a very slight angle so the back of the blade is dragging along the kefr line and could cause some chipping or feathering. This is just a suggestion mind you...
EI would say that even with a guide rail it's still not good practice to cut from the face side on laminated worktops if you want a really clean finish as the upcut action of the blade will try and rip the laminate away from the substrate. I wouldn't be over keen on dragging a circular saw back for a scoring cut either, even with a minimal projection. It's much the same as climb cutting with a router, you are encouraging the machine to draw itself back quickly and that could result in an accident as it can race and jump the cut.
The spring guard should protect the blade if it does happen, but a split second of the blade not being covered is enough to do plenty of damage to flesh.
cheers,
Andy