FestitaMakool
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- Joined
- Oct 12, 2019
- Messages
- 1,491
Moved this topic here in order not to hijack another thread.
[member=8955]Coen[/member]
Don’t know if this helps, but yes I had quite a long time adjusting an dialling in my CS 50.
Me too did not think it should be like this, it’s not a cheap saw...
I did recently find out a small detail that I had overlooked. The plastic end cap on the fence, LA-CS 50/CMS was mounted upside down from factory. This meant that the locking lever for rear of the fence was quite sticky and hard to move, and made a squeaking sound when tightened. That sliding aluminium part of the fence which are reversible did not rest perpendicular to the main fence, leaning slight inwards because of interference with the two very small profiles on the rear plastic end cap. First I shaved that one side a bit, but suddenly I see its mounted upside down.
Reversing this end cap to its right position straightened everything, even the action on the lever.
See photo below (in the photo it is in the right orientation, the circles and arrows point out the areas that interfered with the sub-fence.
[attachimg=1]
[member=8955]Coen[/member]
Don’t know if this helps, but yes I had quite a long time adjusting an dialling in my CS 50.
Me too did not think it should be like this, it’s not a cheap saw...
I did recently find out a small detail that I had overlooked. The plastic end cap on the fence, LA-CS 50/CMS was mounted upside down from factory. This meant that the locking lever for rear of the fence was quite sticky and hard to move, and made a squeaking sound when tightened. That sliding aluminium part of the fence which are reversible did not rest perpendicular to the main fence, leaning slight inwards because of interference with the two very small profiles on the rear plastic end cap. First I shaved that one side a bit, but suddenly I see its mounted upside down.
Reversing this end cap to its right position straightened everything, even the action on the lever.
See photo below (in the photo it is in the right orientation, the circles and arrows point out the areas that interfered with the sub-fence.
Coen said:It's never forced to move the same on both ends. Seems a €800 Dewalt (including the parallel fence) is more accurate on that part than the Festool (which sells separate for €300). My brother asked me about a table saw, and I advised him to look beyond a CS 50 (which I use). The CS 50 table isn't even flat, the fence isn't perpendicular to the table, the table is tilted downward closer to the saw... meh. And everything seems to be just not stiff enough. Eg cutting plates with the sliding table (492100) doesn't seem to give more repeat accuracy than just measuring it out and cutting with TS55 and rail.
Honestly, I think that is a shame.
[attachimg=1]