Kodi Crescent
Member
- Joined
- Aug 6, 2010
- Messages
- 791
I like your shop organization and decorations. The Band-Aids are a nice touch. Did you have a mishap with a SawStop?
Cort said:I am a little overwhelmed by what Festool to buy next since I need so much.
Brice Burrell said:They are not. Bob Marino is the US retailer and Dan Clermont in Canada, maybe one of them would be willing to ship to Europe. Or, you could could take Paul up on his offer.
Qwas said:Looks like a good working model Sparky. [smile] I don't have an MFT/3 so I can't verify any technical aspects but it looks right. I'm working with Paul-Marcel on something that might make this alignment easier.
I notice step 9 and hope you showed this primarily to show how. I would find it much easier to just put my Qwas Dogs in the holes and then use the dogs as the fence rather than worry about moving and aligning the fence. This is my favorite use for the dogs since it saves you from reaching all the way across the table to make a cut on something small like 4-12" wide. Now the fence stays aligned for use with bigger workpieces and the dogs can be put in closer holes for smaller pieces. [smile]
Big Al said:Sparktrician,
Not sure if you've tried this but the fence clamp WILL work if you change the hole position on the clamp. Unscrew the locking knob on top of the clamp, but be careful as there is a spring that likes to run out of the shop if it escapes. There are two holes on the clamp. I use the hole closest to the back of the fence. My setup is as follows...
2 Qwas dogs in the last row of holes
Push fence against the dogs from behind the dogs. This leaves a little bit of table top on the MFT 3 behind the fence, but not much.
Clamp down using the protractor head and the fence clamp on the back rail, not the left side rail. This only works for 90 degree cuts obviously, but we can always move the clamp to the side rail for angle cuts.
The fence clamp doesn't drop into the slot perfectly, but it does tighten down and lock the back fence in well. Before I found out about the two holes, I simply used a clamp on the far end.
Of course, you'll still have to calibrate the saw, but I've found I like the extra width with this fence setting. I don't have to remove it as often when it gets in the way of other projects...
Sparktrician said:2. Using the Mini-square, verify that the cut-away end of the fence lines up with the right side of the miter gauge.
[attachthumb=#2]
This will provide 1 1/8” clear space between the end of the fence and the cut line in the MFT.
[attachthumb=#3]
Steve R said:I understand why you use the mini-square to aline the fence to the miter gauge. Well maybe I don't. I reason that we want the taller portion of the rail in contact with the miter gauge, as apposed to the lower trimmed part of the fence is there any other reason?.
Steve R said:I also don't understand how that alignment, will "ensure" as you state in the next image "This will provide 1 1/8” clear space between the end of the fence and the cut line in the MFT."? My Miter gauge can attach anywhere along the back rail of the MFT/3 (let's not talk about day one with the toy that I nipped into the top of the fence [eek] because it was past the cutting edge of the rail). There is only the stop in the back tack at 8 3/4' from the right (when looking from the front) that the trail hinge bracket uses. As you don't have a tape attached to fence it is not really an issue during your set up as long as the rail end in not in harms way of the TS blade.
So did you just pick 1 1/8” as what you wanted to use. Or is that a measure that if I get the fence closer to the cut line I could loose some functionality?