paulhtremblay
Member
- Joined
- Jun 4, 2014
- Messages
- 148
Michael Kellough said:"The saw is not cutting consistently. After each cut, I put a square against the new cut. For example, for one test, I got nearly perfectly square cuts for the first three cuts. Then for the fourth, the cut was way out of square for no reason. "
You know that can't be true.
There are only two ways the saw could cut inconsistently.
1. The blade is loose. In that case you'd never get a good cut so it can't be that...
2. The jibs are loose so the saw is not snug on the spine of the rail allowing you to change the toe-in
as the saw cuts. If the jibs are loose you can torque the saw clockwise or counter as you go.
If the toe adjustment is off too much you'll get measurable differences in the width of the piece if the entire blade did not pass all the way past the work. If the blade was not fully plunged before entering the work you can also get measurable differences. Keep in mind measurable does not necessarily mean significant.
Of course there is a scientific reason. I mean to say, I haven't done anything different, since I still very carefully snug the board to the fence, make sure my saw is flat on the rail, etc. The jibs are snug (checked them more than a few times), and of course, the blade isn't loose.
I have read else where that you must make sure the blade goes all the way past the work, which I think means past the second jib (green knob). If you didn't, would you leave a chunk at the end of the board?