Albatros
Member
I'm hoping to get some expert advice or maybe just some reassurance about the play I get from my table saw (Sip 12" cast iron table saw). I'll start with a question:
Should I expect to be able to cut slots that are the same width of the keft of the blade I am using? In my case I have a Freud blade with a 2.7mm kerf but it cuts slots that are about 3.05mm wide.
If the answer is yes I should get slots that are the same width then please read on to see what I have tried, in vain, to solve the problem. If you think that 0.35mm is a prefectly acceptable amount of play then don't bother reading the rest! I would like to hear your opinion though.
I get good clean cuts, no kickback and I am confident that the blade is parallel to the t-slots but hearing the blade rattle against my cross cut sled as it slows down is a constant reminder it is not 100% (or is this 'normal'??)
Before I had my current saw, I had the 10" model and I had exactly the same issue with approximately the same amount of wobble (around 3/10 of a mm according to my dial indicator).
I have followed advice from The Wood Whisperer, Mathias Wandel and some other online sources but I can't seem to make any significant difference. Having already trouble-shooted the blade, the arbor and the nut and washer and not really getting anywhere I am questioning if the problem is actually caused by the bed contorting very slightly resulting in the distance between the t-slot and blade constantly changing by tiny fractions as a result of some small vibrations. There is no obvious excessive vibration but I have noticed that pressure applied by one finger to the table top causes the dial, which is resting aginst the arbor, to move by as much as half a mm. This saw has the motor and all the tilt & rising mechanism bolted to the underside of the bed so vibrations transfer directly to the bed.
Any ideas? Am I being too precious about obtaining perfect accuracy or should I expect more from my saw?
Should I expect to be able to cut slots that are the same width of the keft of the blade I am using? In my case I have a Freud blade with a 2.7mm kerf but it cuts slots that are about 3.05mm wide.
If the answer is yes I should get slots that are the same width then please read on to see what I have tried, in vain, to solve the problem. If you think that 0.35mm is a prefectly acceptable amount of play then don't bother reading the rest! I would like to hear your opinion though.
I get good clean cuts, no kickback and I am confident that the blade is parallel to the t-slots but hearing the blade rattle against my cross cut sled as it slows down is a constant reminder it is not 100% (or is this 'normal'??)
Before I had my current saw, I had the 10" model and I had exactly the same issue with approximately the same amount of wobble (around 3/10 of a mm according to my dial indicator).
I have followed advice from The Wood Whisperer, Mathias Wandel and some other online sources but I can't seem to make any significant difference. Having already trouble-shooted the blade, the arbor and the nut and washer and not really getting anywhere I am questioning if the problem is actually caused by the bed contorting very slightly resulting in the distance between the t-slot and blade constantly changing by tiny fractions as a result of some small vibrations. There is no obvious excessive vibration but I have noticed that pressure applied by one finger to the table top causes the dial, which is resting aginst the arbor, to move by as much as half a mm. This saw has the motor and all the tilt & rising mechanism bolted to the underside of the bed so vibrations transfer directly to the bed.
Any ideas? Am I being too precious about obtaining perfect accuracy or should I expect more from my saw?