I have been poking around on several forums and posted a couple of places with no "perfect" answer to this problem. If I have the TSO Parallel Guide System and I want a large piece of plywood, say 45" by 60", I cannot see how to do this easily. The 45" cut is straightforward, you just rip two parallel cuts, the first one with the FS track (FST) alone and the second one with the TSO/FST. Nice and simple, now I have a piece that is 45" by 96". Then use the TSO/FST to crosscut off the factory edge at 90 degrees, leaving me with 45" by 95.75". Now the challenge comes because I have to figure out how to measure 60" with a tool jig that is 50". I see three solutions, none of which is optimal to me.
In another forum, someone suggested that I cut from the short end, making sure to account for the kerf of the saw blade. This can work if you know the kerf of the blade and it is in imperial units (of course, I could go metric, but am not sure I want to repurchase all my measuring tools yet). Then I have to do some calculations, which are not difficult, and set up the tool from the short end.
I could also purchase two Guide Rail Adapters and connect a 20" rail to the 50" rail and go from there. The difficulty I see is that the 50" rail itself is longer than the scale, which would require a different calculation and hope that this distance is some "round" number.
I could also make a mark on both sides of the plywood at 10" and set the flip stops to 50" and align them by eye to the pencil marks and clamp everything down carefully.
All three of these solutions would work, but introduce another potential error into the process. Is there any other solution that someone sees?
Thanks.
In another forum, someone suggested that I cut from the short end, making sure to account for the kerf of the saw blade. This can work if you know the kerf of the blade and it is in imperial units (of course, I could go metric, but am not sure I want to repurchase all my measuring tools yet). Then I have to do some calculations, which are not difficult, and set up the tool from the short end.
I could also purchase two Guide Rail Adapters and connect a 20" rail to the 50" rail and go from there. The difficulty I see is that the 50" rail itself is longer than the scale, which would require a different calculation and hope that this distance is some "round" number.
I could also make a mark on both sides of the plywood at 10" and set the flip stops to 50" and align them by eye to the pencil marks and clamp everything down carefully.
All three of these solutions would work, but introduce another potential error into the process. Is there any other solution that someone sees?
Thanks.