ccarrolladams
Member
- Joined
- Apr 14, 2010
- Messages
- 1,451
Alan m said:ok i know im asking a stupid question , but here goes
why does the thickness of the kerf matter to the splinter guard . is it not regestered off of the flange on the arbor of the motor .
have they reduced the amount of clearence between the side of the tooth and the body of the blade
Alan you ask a logical question.
Saw blades normally have a kerf wider than the metal around the arbor. Thus when you index from the arbor face with different style blades the position of the kerf on the arbor side will vary. This is true of all saws. Our big slider and beam saws store information about every blade in our inventory, each with a unique serial number. When each blade is re-ground it is measured and the data in the computer is adjusted such that the rip fence on the slider knows how far it is from both side of the kerf. The same is true of the beam saw.
Most of the time our TS55 saws use the standard 48 tooth fine blades. All our TS55 have been adjusted such that the inner side of the kerf is the same relative to the splinter guard. Since 2006 I have not used a TS55 without a guide rail and only to break down sheet material.
As Shane and others have stated, the larger blades on the TS75 need a wider kerf. We have surface ground steel shims for our TS75 blades so each makes the inner side of its kerf in the identical place as do all the TS55. Our goal is that all will be within 0.1mm of each other and do minimal damage to any of our guide rails. We have accomplished this with the TS55 I own and those personally owned by the cabinet makers working with me. We have managed to come very close with the TS75 I own with one kind of blade. The cabinet maker who owns his own TS75 has a couple of rails that match his saw, so he uses those with his TS75 and the shop rails with his TS55.