I've just started cutting wider boards and have found cuts being off a few tenths of a degree...
everything checks out along the fence and with the chopper.
I then checked the tables:
the rotating table is coplanar with the right table extension, but the left table is not fully coplanar; it curves down away from the fence.
I'm guessing that's where the problem is.
When you lay a straight edge across the three tables, it's pretty obvious, and at it's worst (nearest to the front) you can slide an xacto blade in under the straightedge. At the fence it's sorta okay, being 12 or 15 thousandths low.
So, is this a standard feature? Seems like the casting just sucks, as is evidenced by the sharp, crusty flash running around the base.
I wish I had used this tool more in the first month! Sucks to have noticed this now, months later.
if it were high, I would be able to deal with it, but low is not good. Is there anything festool can do? They're one piece, so what is there to do?
everything checks out along the fence and with the chopper.
I then checked the tables:
the rotating table is coplanar with the right table extension, but the left table is not fully coplanar; it curves down away from the fence.
I'm guessing that's where the problem is.
When you lay a straight edge across the three tables, it's pretty obvious, and at it's worst (nearest to the front) you can slide an xacto blade in under the straightedge. At the fence it's sorta okay, being 12 or 15 thousandths low.
So, is this a standard feature? Seems like the casting just sucks, as is evidenced by the sharp, crusty flash running around the base.
I wish I had used this tool more in the first month! Sucks to have noticed this now, months later.
if it were high, I would be able to deal with it, but low is not good. Is there anything festool can do? They're one piece, so what is there to do?