Michael Kellough
Member
- Joined
- Jan 23, 2007
- Messages
- 7,096
waynew said:MiterMaster,
This little exercise told me that the travel is out by over a 1/32" over the entire length of travel. Because of the travel issue its not that clear whether the blade is also unparallel to the table but it seems its okay in this respect.
The travel is from front left to back right.
Thanks,
Wayne
This might not be correct.
Unless your saw is set to cut dead square to the fence using a square on the fence won't tell you how the saw tracks. Really, the saws always tracks straight anyway. It can't do otherwise since it rides on two straight rods.
You can use this test to see if the fence is square to the travel but there are easier ways. Also, this test requires that you test the same tooth at both beginning and end of the travel and that you don't rotate the blade.
What you are really trying to test is if the blade is parallel to the travel of the saw, not parallel to the table. Another way of describing it is that you are checking to see if the arbor is perpendicular to the slide rods as viewed from above. It isn't easy to test, especially if the blade is suspect. A dead flat square plate (round on the top) that fit on the arbor would be helpful.

Frankly I don't know a good way to test if the arbor is perpendicular to the travel on a SCMS. Maybe Rick does.
The bottom line (IMO) is it's either a bad blade as Spike says, operator error as Rick says, or both. If you have a perfect arbor then a heavy, stiff, FLAT blade is great, like Spike says. But, if the blade is warped or the arbor has some run-out there will be a lot of bad vibrations, especially in a cantilevered arbor like a miter saw. The type of blade supplied with the Kapex "adjusts" to run-out via centrifugal force to become a nice flat plane while it's spinning at speed but the imperfections can become exaggerated when an electric brake is engaged. So, for best results you should withdraw the saw from the work before cutting the power as Spike advised.