memzey
Established Member
The way that I set up my table saw is covered above ref; use of the same tooth fore and aft of the arbour. I can’t see what advantage a bit of MDF would have over the steel plate of an actual saw.
As I intimidate earlier, in my limited experience I’d say setting up a RAS is far more involved and demanding than setting up a table saw however the end result can be as accurate as anything else in the workshop. It took a while to get it there but my RAS now cuts bob on 90* and 45* with no bother whatsoever. If you’re not happy with the results you’re getting from your machine Mike perhaps you could open a thread on it and others with the same one could share their experiences?MikeG.":2ozok9rf said:the buggeration that is setting up my RAS*.
*I wouldn't dream of using this for cutting accurate right angles now. Hand tools every time......
memzey":2ev54cez said:As I intimidate earlier, in my limited experience I’d say setting up a RAS is far more involved and demanding than setting up a table saw however the end result can be as accurate as anything else in the workshop. It took a while to get it there but my RAS now cuts bob on 90* and 45* with no bother whatsoever. If you’re not happy with the results you’re getting from your machine Mike perhaps you could open a thread on it and others with the same one could share their experiences?MikeG.":2ev54cez said:the buggeration that is setting up my RAS*.
*I wouldn't dream of using this for cutting accurate right angles now. Hand tools every time......
Sorry for the thread drift SB but you know me well enough by now!!!
I don't think the MDF is goer. It is introducing another variable.sunnybob":1zfuyh0s said:I dont mind you lot sneering at my weather this year (no, honestly :roll: )
this is my 11 th year here, and this is only the second wet winter.
The problem is its like deep snow in England, when it does happen nobody knows what to do with it. We dont even have mains drainage in the streets, let alone our houses.
Memzey might not like our summers, but roll on 35c (about another 3 weeks if I'm lucky) 8) 8) 8) 8)
Mike, a problem with your MDF test wheel, theres no way I could make a 30 mm hole in the middle of it and be CERTAIN its 90 degrees and concentric.
Sideways":29nrr8lp said:There should be a slightly wider gap between the fence and the back of the blade than the gap at the front edge of the blade.
sunnybob":145vz54g said:Well, its not good. I think I have found the limitation of this saw.
the blade is 0.28 mm off set from the mitre slot, closing towards the fence when its on the right.
I agree. This is a site saw after all, not a precision furniture making cabinet saw. Probably within tolerance.screwpainting":pmfuy5fv said:sunnybob":pmfuy5fv said:Well, its not good. I think I have found the limitation of this saw.
the blade is 0.28 mm off set from the mitre slot, closing towards the fence when its on the right.
Seriously? 0.28mm. What difference is this making to the way the machine actually cuts Bob.
That reads bloody nigh perfect to me and certainly good enough for anything made out of wood (by me,anyway). Is that type of fence supposed to be super accurate at every position after being moved? I would have thought it must have a degree of variation, its a mobile unit after all and would be prone to getting knocked out of set occasionally. If it gives you an acceptable cut I would be happy with that and just get to know its foibles.
Just my two bobs worth.
sunnybob":qlozg0hi said:BUT, the number is not relevant. I measured it to prove the point and the point is that if i cut a piece of wood it pulls up at the back of the blade and damages the cut edge. THATS not acceptable and THATS what I'm trying to rectify.
)
Enter your email address to join: