As I'm sure is the case for many people, during the great panini I took up some woodworking (in no small part due to my wife telling me to find something to do that didn't involve bothering her) and have been steadily expanding my garage workshop ever since. I've so far made do with one of those cheap little table saws you find in the middle shelves of certain supermarkets. It's fine, but has many obvious limitations, and I need something proper.
Something like the Dewalt 745 or Bosch GTS 10J is around the right price, and reviews are generally positive. I'm really just after something that keeps pretty square with a good fence and copes well with plywood and oak boards (hobbyist level usage).
And here's the issue, I've mostly been following the many US-based youtubers who show what amazing projects you can do when manufacturers don't have to be concerned with the safety of the operator ie. no riving knife or blade guard, and dado-stacks galore. Don't worry, I'm not (quite) daft enough to want to run a table saw without safety measures in place, but the riving knife being proud of the blade presents a serious issue as you simply can't cut grooves, or build a crosscut sled...
Of course, those last two statements cannot possibly be true, so how do you do them? Can you buy low-profile riving knives that can be installed in the above (or similar) table saws? I've trawled other threads where the answer is "angle grinder". Do some model saws in the UK come with this type of shorter knife pre-installed? Am I just using the wrong technique, and shouldn't be using a table saw for this sort of joinery in the first place?
Something like the Dewalt 745 or Bosch GTS 10J is around the right price, and reviews are generally positive. I'm really just after something that keeps pretty square with a good fence and copes well with plywood and oak boards (hobbyist level usage).
And here's the issue, I've mostly been following the many US-based youtubers who show what amazing projects you can do when manufacturers don't have to be concerned with the safety of the operator ie. no riving knife or blade guard, and dado-stacks galore. Don't worry, I'm not (quite) daft enough to want to run a table saw without safety measures in place, but the riving knife being proud of the blade presents a serious issue as you simply can't cut grooves, or build a crosscut sled...
Of course, those last two statements cannot possibly be true, so how do you do them? Can you buy low-profile riving knives that can be installed in the above (or similar) table saws? I've trawled other threads where the answer is "angle grinder". Do some model saws in the UK come with this type of shorter knife pre-installed? Am I just using the wrong technique, and shouldn't be using a table saw for this sort of joinery in the first place?