Hi,
I'm about to receive a TS 60 KEBQ with a Festool rail.
Obviously, I am buying this kind of saw for its accuracy.
In order to not be disappointed, can you suggest a method to check if the saw actually cuts at 90 / 45 / 22.5 ?
Right now with my current circular saw (not even a plunge saw / track saw), if I lay a board on the freshly cut edge, I have a deviation of about 3 mm at 400mm, using the distance from a square that lays on the reference surface.
I know there is a lot to unpack here, like... is it really necessary to have an exact 90 degrees, knowing that if the deviation is constant, I could flip the next board to cancel it..
This is in the context of furniture building. I don't have a jointer.
I'm about to receive a TS 60 KEBQ with a Festool rail.
Obviously, I am buying this kind of saw for its accuracy.
In order to not be disappointed, can you suggest a method to check if the saw actually cuts at 90 / 45 / 22.5 ?
Right now with my current circular saw (not even a plunge saw / track saw), if I lay a board on the freshly cut edge, I have a deviation of about 3 mm at 400mm, using the distance from a square that lays on the reference surface.
I know there is a lot to unpack here, like... is it really necessary to have an exact 90 degrees, knowing that if the deviation is constant, I could flip the next board to cancel it..
This is in the context of furniture building. I don't have a jointer.