After ripping the long factory edge of some plywood, getting a square crosscut from the referenced rip cut is proving to be difficult.
I've had this issue pretty much since I've had this saw and 1400 rails for about 2 years now but have always just worked through it. Using several different precision squares (Woodpeckers) to set the rail 90 degrees from the original rip cut always produces a cut that is out of square. It is about 1/8" over the span of 48".
This week I have really tried to solve the issue because I would love to get a TSO or Woodpeckers guide rail square one day. I watched Peter's video and read the supplemental manual. The saw was pretty much calibrated based on these methods (front saw blade tooth touching and back saw tooth a paper width out).
If I make a mark with a T-Square and just put the splinter guard on that mark, it seems to produce a cut that I can live with. This leads me to believe it is the rails. This occurs on both rails but what are the odds that I received two bad rails?
I called Festool yesterday and was surprised at what I was told. The guy I spoke with said that the TS 55 and rails are not precise enough to get square cuts without the use of their parallel guides and MFT table. He said third-party squares such as TSO and Woodpeckers are not precise either. In other words, and this is what I repeated back and he agreed, you plop down ~$600 for a saw, another ~$300 for some rails and you're still expected to pay another ~$900 to get some parallel guides and an MFT table just to get an accurate crosscut.
So at this stage, I'm not sure what to do. I definitely don't want to spend that kind of money. I'm contemplating selling it and getting a Makita, DeWALT or Triton and use the extra money to get some other tools for the shop. Not bashing Festool, it's just been a frustrating battle trying to get square cuts and was hoping to get some answers with Festool. That's why I am posting here instead to see if anyone else has experienced the same issue. Love my Domino by the way. Game changer for my work.
I've had this issue pretty much since I've had this saw and 1400 rails for about 2 years now but have always just worked through it. Using several different precision squares (Woodpeckers) to set the rail 90 degrees from the original rip cut always produces a cut that is out of square. It is about 1/8" over the span of 48".
This week I have really tried to solve the issue because I would love to get a TSO or Woodpeckers guide rail square one day. I watched Peter's video and read the supplemental manual. The saw was pretty much calibrated based on these methods (front saw blade tooth touching and back saw tooth a paper width out).
If I make a mark with a T-Square and just put the splinter guard on that mark, it seems to produce a cut that I can live with. This leads me to believe it is the rails. This occurs on both rails but what are the odds that I received two bad rails?
I called Festool yesterday and was surprised at what I was told. The guy I spoke with said that the TS 55 and rails are not precise enough to get square cuts without the use of their parallel guides and MFT table. He said third-party squares such as TSO and Woodpeckers are not precise either. In other words, and this is what I repeated back and he agreed, you plop down ~$600 for a saw, another ~$300 for some rails and you're still expected to pay another ~$900 to get some parallel guides and an MFT table just to get an accurate crosscut.
So at this stage, I'm not sure what to do. I definitely don't want to spend that kind of money. I'm contemplating selling it and getting a Makita, DeWALT or Triton and use the extra money to get some other tools for the shop. Not bashing Festool, it's just been a frustrating battle trying to get square cuts and was hoping to get some answers with Festool. That's why I am posting here instead to see if anyone else has experienced the same issue. Love my Domino by the way. Game changer for my work.