jimwillsher
Established Member
Hi all
First off...I know about the official HSE statements regarding dados in the UK. But I have one, and I need to use it.
I have a requirement to make a "comb" in the end of a piece of sarking. So about 8 or 9 long cuts, stretching about 20 CM up the length of sarking, with each cut being around 1CM wide. Think of a fork!
So, two questions around the dado:
1) Are there any safety implications with feeding the wood into the saw, then retracting it once I have reached the right length of cut? e.g. not feeding it right through
2) To avoid an angled top to the cut, am I okay to raise the blade as high as it will go, so that the cut will be as close to 90 degrees as it can be. Aside from the obvious spinning blades with no crown guard.
I'm approaching these questions from a kickback perspective. I'm aware that having 3 or 4 blades spinning at full lick with no guard brings a few risks.
Many thanks
Jim
First off...I know about the official HSE statements regarding dados in the UK. But I have one, and I need to use it.
I have a requirement to make a "comb" in the end of a piece of sarking. So about 8 or 9 long cuts, stretching about 20 CM up the length of sarking, with each cut being around 1CM wide. Think of a fork!
So, two questions around the dado:
1) Are there any safety implications with feeding the wood into the saw, then retracting it once I have reached the right length of cut? e.g. not feeding it right through
2) To avoid an angled top to the cut, am I okay to raise the blade as high as it will go, so that the cut will be as close to 90 degrees as it can be. Aside from the obvious spinning blades with no crown guard.
I'm approaching these questions from a kickback perspective. I'm aware that having 3 or 4 blades spinning at full lick with no guard brings a few risks.
Many thanks
Jim