fshanno said:
The DeWalt T-Square fits the Festool rail. Received mine a couple of days ago and I'm getting very good 90 degree crosscuts now. This problem appears to be solved.... Meanwhile the DeWalt is only 26 bucks.
Solved? not really but at least another tool that
COULD improve square cuts...
I used the "t-square head" method for many years and found many frustrations as well. The idea of a T-square sounds great on paper and for many projects it is
near perfect. You must be careful with your cut sequence when using the t-square method. The small registration surface of the "head" can be a problem and unless the reference edge is "perfect" the error is magnified exponentially by the length of the cut. Usually not a big problem on cross cuts but on occasion I have had the cut wind up out of square by a quarter of an inch. Worse then that is sometimes you don't notice the first cut is off until you go to assemble your project and then ARGHHHHHHHHHHHH.
Now for full length cuts on sheet goods the small head is simply that... TOO DAMN SMALL. It is like using a 6 inch bubble level to build a 10 foot wall. RIGHT STRING WRONG YO-YO! My point here is you can't just "trust the t-square" head and lay it down cut and assume all is well. example: cross cut a panel of cheap plywood: if the "t-square" method were to reference an almost true edge the "almost" could cause the cut to be out by lets say 1/64" (.396 mm) not bad at all, now you find later you need to cut the long edge so you reference the new cross cut edge. this long cut is now out by at least 3/32" (1/64 from first cut plus 2/64 for the double length cut) now lets say you need at least four pieces of this ply for a cabinet and by the time you add up all the cumulative error you can be out by close to 1/2" and nothing will fit right. I know sounds extreme but it happens all the time. To get the best results with the "t-square" method don't assume the sheet is square and parallel to begin with. Use festool_swfl's idea, cut a clean reference edge one a long edge first. use that as your ref for all your cross cuts then square the final long edge. I know it sounds time consuming and tedious but it will save you much more time come assembly! Keep in mind when breaking down plywood, that all the edges on a sheet can be parallel and the the sheet can still be be way out of square (i.e. parallelogram). In fact with some cheap plywood I have had two opposite corners appear to be "square" and had the whole sheet be out a whack do to untrue edges.
Another option for those that like the "t-square" method is to use a
12 inch swanson speed square, cost about the same as the dewalt head and offers a much larger reference edge. I know many people see this as a "construction" tool and it ain't pretty, but mine is dead on when compared to my 12" Starret combo square. works great for the "t-square" method. Heck even the
7 inch swanson is at least as good as the dewalt head at it cost about 10 bucks
For those that like the parallel technique of squaring sheet goods here is a link for an in-expensive and very precise method
http://festoolownersgroup.com/index.php?topic=3341.0
Personally I find a combination of the techniques is often needed and is predicated by just how precise I need thing to be. Cutting subfloor or other construction panels where a gap is left for expansion anyway i just use a tape cut and move on. For general projects I use the t-square method. For the most demanding cuts that can lead to significant cumulative error I use the "cut a new long edge then square method" I think the FS-PA is going to be high on my future list but even then I will continue to let the job at hand define the technique.
So much for my "quick reply" :
Frank