You're using it wrong. Seriously! Get some guidance now. Don't cut on a pull stroke. You're supposed to pull the saw all the way towards you, place the piece to be cut where you want it, start the saw and cut with a push stroke.
Pete
Sorry Pete, you're completely wrong, and I think trying to compare a cross cut miter saw with a radial arm saw.
I've seen the cross cut method of bringing the saw right to the front and cutting backwards towards the fence and in my mind, trained at college to degree standard incidentally(College of Building and Printing-Glasgow- All my lecturers were time served production joiners,cabinetmakers and such(The college has trained every joiner/cabinetmaker and furniture maker in Glasgow since at least the 1960's)
It is an incorrect and unsafe way to do it imho. God alone knows how this method came about, but i say its incorrect.
A flat board sitting on the table, you pull the saw out and contact the edge of the board and the forces of the blade want to pick the board up off the table. The direction of the blade is a lifting motion when you do it that way, rather than from fence out, where the 'up cut' back of the blade is moving through the kerf with no resistance. Also the saw blade is pushing the workpiece against the fence.
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