Michael Kellough
Member
- Joined
- Jan 23, 2007
- Messages
- 7,096
The track saw bears against the right side of the top spine of the track so the kerf will always be the same distance from the spine regardless of what the splinter guard indicates. *
The splinter guard and kerf will only be congruent for a few or several cuts after the initial trimming, depending on the blade and consistency of the stock being cut.
* Except for the Panther blade. Not even a hard measurement from the the track spine will reliably predict what that wild blade will do. And after making a cut with the Panther the splinter guard will no longer be a useful indicator for any blade.
[member=76885]MacBoy[/member] the splinter guard at the beginning and end of the rails is often the least reliable indicator of the kerf since they are often over or under trimmed by the saw. To be trimmed correctly both jibs of the saw base have to be on the track spine (and properly adjusted). When the track is a little short for the task the saw is often backed up such that the rear jib is off the spine. And when the front of the saw runs off the end of the track before the blade is stopped that end of the splinter guard is over or under trimmed as well. Under trimming of the splinter guard is only possible when the splinter guard is initially trimmed. From then on the strip is subject to over trimming which will continue until no part of the strip reaches the actual kerf.
The splinter guard and kerf will only be congruent for a few or several cuts after the initial trimming, depending on the blade and consistency of the stock being cut.
* Except for the Panther blade. Not even a hard measurement from the the track spine will reliably predict what that wild blade will do. And after making a cut with the Panther the splinter guard will no longer be a useful indicator for any blade.
[member=76885]MacBoy[/member] the splinter guard at the beginning and end of the rails is often the least reliable indicator of the kerf since they are often over or under trimmed by the saw. To be trimmed correctly both jibs of the saw base have to be on the track spine (and properly adjusted). When the track is a little short for the task the saw is often backed up such that the rear jib is off the spine. And when the front of the saw runs off the end of the track before the blade is stopped that end of the splinter guard is over or under trimmed as well. Under trimming of the splinter guard is only possible when the splinter guard is initially trimmed. From then on the strip is subject to over trimming which will continue until no part of the strip reaches the actual kerf.