It IS nice to have such an encouraging audience
Chivvied on by you all, we moved the job along some more today.
The first table to refit is the complete slider assembly
It lifts into place and must be aligned to the blade. This is done with a pair of square head bolts at the front and rear of the table. When the table is in working position, the square heads bear against sections of the casting. You can just see the bolt immediately above, screwed through a rounded pillar and with a lock nut and the bolt head both facing right.
The proper alignment needs the bolt head to be just out from the pillar so we had to turn 3mm length off the heads to achieve alignment and move the locknut to the opposite side of the pillar.
These are "new" adjusting screws - the originals were too damaged.
Once the sliding table is aligned, the right hand fixed table is installed next.
The fixed table has height adjusters at each corner so that it can be set to the same plane as the sliding table.
Each corner is composed of a threaded tube, with screwdriver slots in the lower end and a lock nut which we prefer to put on top. It's difficult to reach but the locknuts might work underneath too.
The tubes screw into the corners of the casting and are adjusted like jacks to level the table.
On the two outer corners, holes have been cut / cast in the casting to allow access to adjust the jacks
A little allowance must be made for the locknuts which pull the tubes upwards when they are tightened.
There's not a lot of clearance so tightening the locknuts while the table is in place would be tricky.
Once the tubular supports are levelled and locked, the table drops on for hopefully the last time. The table has studs that drop through the four tubes, and washers and nuts are fitted from below to lock the table down tight.
There are a couple of mm of clearance between the studs and the holes that they fit. so the fixed table can be aligned laterally as well as made flat to the slider.
Levelling the fixed table involves some repeated measurement and adjustment until you get it right. Here we're about 0.2mm high so we'll finish the levelling off tomorrow.
The measuring device is from Oneway, Canada. Not the best clock but the cast frame is excellent for this job, and for other tablesaw and planer / thicknesser alignment tasks.