I am in the process of building some small cabinets for some extra space and am just using the cheap melamine that I got from one of the big box stores. The first couple that I made, the cut quality was really bad, so after reading some posts on here about cutting melamine, I figured I would run a few tests to try and get some better quality cuts.
Before I ran these tests, I re-calibrated my saw using Rick's supplemental manual...mainly on page 12 under "Matching the TS 55 to an Existing Guide Rail". By doing this alone, I already saw improvements in the cuts, so obviously my saw wasn't quite calibrated before.
http://www.waterfront-woods.com/festool/TS_55_EQ_US.pdf
For my tests, I used 5/8" melamine. I ran the saw at a speed of 6 and used a brand new green splinterguard. The blade was the one that came with the saw (495377). My cutting table has a 1/2" MDF backer on it and I tried to make the cuts on areas where there weren't any cutmarks from previous cuts so that the bottom side of the cut was supported. When I refer to full depth that means 23 on the TS 55 scale and scoring cuts were done at 6 on the TS 55 scale.
Test 1 - One cut made to full depth.
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Test 2 - Two cuts. First cut is a scoring cut. Second cut is made to full depth.
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Test 3 - Three cuts. First cut is a scoring cut on opposite side then flip piece over. Second cut is a scoring cut. Third cut is made to full depth.
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Clearly, making the scoring cut really makes the cuts about as good as you can possibly get (at least on the main cut side). Only problem is obviously having to now make multiple cuts. Not that big of a deal when making them on just the one side, but having the flip the work piece over to make the additional scoring cut could get annoying if you are making a lot of cuts. I will have to try these tests with some better quality melamine though to see what the results are. I figure if I can get decent cuts with this cheap melamine though, anything else I am going to cut should produce some quality cuts.
Before I ran these tests, I re-calibrated my saw using Rick's supplemental manual...mainly on page 12 under "Matching the TS 55 to an Existing Guide Rail". By doing this alone, I already saw improvements in the cuts, so obviously my saw wasn't quite calibrated before.
http://www.waterfront-woods.com/festool/TS_55_EQ_US.pdf
For my tests, I used 5/8" melamine. I ran the saw at a speed of 6 and used a brand new green splinterguard. The blade was the one that came with the saw (495377). My cutting table has a 1/2" MDF backer on it and I tried to make the cuts on areas where there weren't any cutmarks from previous cuts so that the bottom side of the cut was supported. When I refer to full depth that means 23 on the TS 55 scale and scoring cuts were done at 6 on the TS 55 scale.
Test 1 - One cut made to full depth.
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[attachthumb=#2]
Test 2 - Two cuts. First cut is a scoring cut. Second cut is made to full depth.
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[attachthumb=#4]
Test 3 - Three cuts. First cut is a scoring cut on opposite side then flip piece over. Second cut is a scoring cut. Third cut is made to full depth.
[attachthumb=#5]
[attachthumb=#6]
Clearly, making the scoring cut really makes the cuts about as good as you can possibly get (at least on the main cut side). Only problem is obviously having to now make multiple cuts. Not that big of a deal when making them on just the one side, but having the flip the work piece over to make the additional scoring cut could get annoying if you are making a lot of cuts. I will have to try these tests with some better quality melamine though to see what the results are. I figure if I can get decent cuts with this cheap melamine though, anything else I am going to cut should produce some quality cuts.