Michael Kellough
Member
Louis, I forgot to mention earlier that I like your clever idea of sliding the rail forward or back to introduce a fresh section of rail to the steel tab, but eventually (might be a loooong time) you'll be looking for another solution.
All of the factory fresh MFTs I've tried have guide rails set to the right (about an inch) so you have to pull the rail to the left a bit to set it on the steel tab. It would be better if the steel tab had a larger contact area with the rail because it will eventually wear a slot in the aluminum even with the sprung/loose fit. At that point you could slide the rail, maintaining the tension to the same side, or set the tension to the other side without sliding the rail.
Tensioning to the other side will require resetting the fence for square cuts or adjusting the guide rail stop if you use Quas's method of setting the rail to the hole pattern. I'm not a fan of depending on the hole pattern for square cuts because I've had the MDF shift in the frame.
All of the factory fresh MFTs I've tried have guide rails set to the right (about an inch) so you have to pull the rail to the left a bit to set it on the steel tab. It would be better if the steel tab had a larger contact area with the rail because it will eventually wear a slot in the aluminum even with the sprung/loose fit. At that point you could slide the rail, maintaining the tension to the same side, or set the tension to the other side without sliding the rail.
Tensioning to the other side will require resetting the fence for square cuts or adjusting the guide rail stop if you use Quas's method of setting the rail to the hole pattern. I'm not a fan of depending on the hole pattern for square cuts because I've had the MDF shift in the frame.