For some time I’ve been aware that when I cut 45° mitres and joint them, the resulting angle is just shy of 90°.
When set to 45° on the scale, the angle between the blade and baseplate looks right, but it’s hard to tell. The saw sits flat on the rail (I press down on the hatched area on top of the baseplate). The rails are straight and sit flat on the wood, and I am careful to make sure that the rail is supported over its full width, including before the cut starts.
There is a grub screw that limits the bevel angle, and if I tip the saw to this stop it does cut at 45°, but that’s a full degree past the last mark on the scale.
The blade (Festool 48 tooth) is sharp and there’s no play in the snibs on the rail.
Any ideas what I’m doing wrong?
Andrew
When set to 45° on the scale, the angle between the blade and baseplate looks right, but it’s hard to tell. The saw sits flat on the rail (I press down on the hatched area on top of the baseplate). The rails are straight and sit flat on the wood, and I am careful to make sure that the rail is supported over its full width, including before the cut starts.
There is a grub screw that limits the bevel angle, and if I tip the saw to this stop it does cut at 45°, but that’s a full degree past the last mark on the scale.
The blade (Festool 48 tooth) is sharp and there’s no play in the snibs on the rail.
Any ideas what I’m doing wrong?
Andrew