Hi All
I'm a Festool fan and considering a MFT to join my ts55.
What I want to know is how accurate is this device when set up and calibrated?
The main use I want it for will be cutting MDF sheet (3/4 - 1 inch thick) SQUARE and at 90 degrees BANG on for general cupboard carcass work (Euro style, frameless).
I do own a table saw with a crosscut slider (home made) which is great for smaller pieces but when I want to crosscut say 2 foot as accurately as possible to 90 degrees, it takes a lot of setting up, adjusting and trial and error with the fence. Obviously you guys will appreciate the larger the span, the larger the inaccuracy.
Presently I have made a rough home made MFT to try out the theory; all I have is a fence to butt the piece onto and then two adjustable stops which the rail sits on (one at each end of the rail). Adjustment is manual and I do it by taking a square to the fence, then putting a steel rule up against the square (90 degree) and measure the distance from the cutting edge of the rail and fence. I make sure the distance is as close as I can get it to the same at both ends of the rail.
In theory the cut should now be parallel to the fence. Does this make sense? Sorry if not.
The problem I am finding is there is still lots of human error; i.e reading the scale of the rule etc.
When using the MFT can you set up the rail parallel with the fence and then slide it up and down the table whilst retaining perfect paralellness? or will it side skewed loosing its paralallness and need resetting each time the rail is moved?
Hope this make sense
Russ
I'm a Festool fan and considering a MFT to join my ts55.
What I want to know is how accurate is this device when set up and calibrated?
The main use I want it for will be cutting MDF sheet (3/4 - 1 inch thick) SQUARE and at 90 degrees BANG on for general cupboard carcass work (Euro style, frameless).
I do own a table saw with a crosscut slider (home made) which is great for smaller pieces but when I want to crosscut say 2 foot as accurately as possible to 90 degrees, it takes a lot of setting up, adjusting and trial and error with the fence. Obviously you guys will appreciate the larger the span, the larger the inaccuracy.
Presently I have made a rough home made MFT to try out the theory; all I have is a fence to butt the piece onto and then two adjustable stops which the rail sits on (one at each end of the rail). Adjustment is manual and I do it by taking a square to the fence, then putting a steel rule up against the square (90 degree) and measure the distance from the cutting edge of the rail and fence. I make sure the distance is as close as I can get it to the same at both ends of the rail.
In theory the cut should now be parallel to the fence. Does this make sense? Sorry if not.
The problem I am finding is there is still lots of human error; i.e reading the scale of the rule etc.
When using the MFT can you set up the rail parallel with the fence and then slide it up and down the table whilst retaining perfect paralellness? or will it side skewed loosing its paralallness and need resetting each time the rail is moved?
Hope this make sense
Russ