Steve Jones
Member
- Joined
- Dec 23, 2007
- Messages
- 405
the MFT 1080 left with my workshop equipment when I sold the business (actually it was picked up by it's new owner from my current worksite) and within 10 minutes my new MFT 3 was delivered by my dealer (yes, to the worksite - ask me about excellent service sometime)
What a diferrence! any and all of the problems I had had with the old one have been eliminated.....
Want to align the fence? just release one clamp and slide the fence down to the edge of a row of holes, I can tell by look and feel comparing the edge of the fence to the edge of the holes when the alignment is perfect.
Need longer stopped cuts than the fence? - no problem, release two locks (edge clamp and a nifty fence clamp built into the angle unit and the fence (with stop) slides to the left - far off the edge of the table.
Need even longer stopped cuts? - release the locking knob under the angle unit and the angle unit slides to the left leaving even more fence off the left edge (and even longer rips (I was cutting 54" lengths of ply using the stops)
Need wider capacity? - release a locking knob and slide the fence away from you, right up the far edge of the table.
Need to reach less for each cut? - The same locking knob allows you to slide the fence towards you so you don't have to reach so far to cut up narrow stock
Need really wide capacity? release two allen screws to remove the rail, slip in the longer one that came with your saw and move the rail supports to the short sides (I put them right at the edge so my cuts didn't make new grooves in the top)
Clearing the table take too long? I used to hate removing the fence to use the table for assembly or other non cutting tasks, it takes too long to remove those knobs from under the table, now it's done in seconds without having to reach under the table.
Cutting odd angles just too frustrating? with the old table setting an angle other than 90 only works one way (usually the wrong way) and then the end of the fence moves away from the cut line providing less support for small pieces, now I can rotate the angle unit either way and one knob releases the fence to slide it back close to the cut line. releasing another knob allows me to slide the fence left/right to get the best position for cutting while maintaining the angle set, yet another knob lets me slide the fence closer or further away - it's like a high-tech drafting board for making cuts.
Steve
What a diferrence! any and all of the problems I had had with the old one have been eliminated.....
Want to align the fence? just release one clamp and slide the fence down to the edge of a row of holes, I can tell by look and feel comparing the edge of the fence to the edge of the holes when the alignment is perfect.
Need longer stopped cuts than the fence? - no problem, release two locks (edge clamp and a nifty fence clamp built into the angle unit and the fence (with stop) slides to the left - far off the edge of the table.
Need even longer stopped cuts? - release the locking knob under the angle unit and the angle unit slides to the left leaving even more fence off the left edge (and even longer rips (I was cutting 54" lengths of ply using the stops)
Need wider capacity? - release a locking knob and slide the fence away from you, right up the far edge of the table.
Need to reach less for each cut? - The same locking knob allows you to slide the fence towards you so you don't have to reach so far to cut up narrow stock
Need really wide capacity? release two allen screws to remove the rail, slip in the longer one that came with your saw and move the rail supports to the short sides (I put them right at the edge so my cuts didn't make new grooves in the top)
Clearing the table take too long? I used to hate removing the fence to use the table for assembly or other non cutting tasks, it takes too long to remove those knobs from under the table, now it's done in seconds without having to reach under the table.
Cutting odd angles just too frustrating? with the old table setting an angle other than 90 only works one way (usually the wrong way) and then the end of the fence moves away from the cut line providing less support for small pieces, now I can rotate the angle unit either way and one knob releases the fence to slide it back close to the cut line. releasing another knob allows me to slide the fence left/right to get the best position for cutting while maintaining the angle set, yet another knob lets me slide the fence closer or further away - it's like a high-tech drafting board for making cuts.
Steve