Zeddedhed
Established Member
Having recently made my first crosscut sled for the TS (no, I don't know why I didn't do it sooner) I've become something of a convert.
Sled MK I was knocked up in 20mins to do a particular job and worked very well. Then it was adapted for tilted blade mitres. Also worked great.
Then the 'prentice raised the blade a bit too high whilst mitring some stock and it became two sleds..oops!!
So it's time for Sled MK II.
I like the idea of a sled that extends well beyond the blade (aka all the 'murican vids on Youtube). Most of them seem to extend the mitre slots out onto their outfield table.
This is where I started thinking...
My outfeed table is also my assembly bench/painting table/chainsaw servicing bench etc etc. It quite quickly gets carved up and seriously mucky but as the top is just a sheet of 25mm MDF I just flip it over and when both sides are knackered it goes to the flames. Therefore the idea of precisely lining up mitre slots and routing them into what is at best a temporary/consumable surface is not an appealing one.
The lightbulb moment came to me whilst pottering around having a tidy up after finishing a run of seven staircases for a builder.
If I made the usual tightly fitted runners for the mitre slots so that they sat proud of the saw table by 10mm and then made the corresponding grooves on the underside of the sled I could continue pushing through with the sled but the runners would stay on the saw table. The sled would slide out over the outfield table and voila!! Problem solved.
Or am I missing something?
Sled MK I was knocked up in 20mins to do a particular job and worked very well. Then it was adapted for tilted blade mitres. Also worked great.
Then the 'prentice raised the blade a bit too high whilst mitring some stock and it became two sleds..oops!!
So it's time for Sled MK II.
I like the idea of a sled that extends well beyond the blade (aka all the 'murican vids on Youtube). Most of them seem to extend the mitre slots out onto their outfield table.
This is where I started thinking...
My outfeed table is also my assembly bench/painting table/chainsaw servicing bench etc etc. It quite quickly gets carved up and seriously mucky but as the top is just a sheet of 25mm MDF I just flip it over and when both sides are knackered it goes to the flames. Therefore the idea of precisely lining up mitre slots and routing them into what is at best a temporary/consumable surface is not an appealing one.
The lightbulb moment came to me whilst pottering around having a tidy up after finishing a run of seven staircases for a builder.
If I made the usual tightly fitted runners for the mitre slots so that they sat proud of the saw table by 10mm and then made the corresponding grooves on the underside of the sled I could continue pushing through with the sled but the runners would stay on the saw table. The sled would slide out over the outfield table and voila!! Problem solved.
Or am I missing something?