Hello all,
I'm looking for feedback on the best way to level a scrollsaw so the
blade is exactly perpendicular. I've tried several methods
1 - using an engineers square and a white piece of paper to judge the
angle
2 - using a digital protractor (the beall tiltbox) - this one stinks
3 - making a cut, turning the piece around, and using the back of the
blade as a guide.
4 - cutting out an inside shape, and having it slide out in both
directions.
Nos 3 and 4 seem to be the best ways.... I've been able to get the
table close, but not perfect. Even when I think I am dead on, I'm not.
The goal is to achieve #4 - I'm making puzzles out of .75" to 1.5"
stock, and can't seem to get the pieces to fit together in both
directions.
I'm using a Delta Shopmaster - the better one (it comes with the
base.) Other than this I'm pretty happy with it.
thanks in advance for the insights,
shelly
On Mon, 12 Oct 2009 12:37:20 -0700 (PDT), [email protected] wrote:
>Hello all,
>
>I'm looking for feedback on the best way to level a scrollsaw so the
>blade is exactly perpendicular. I've tried several methods
>
>1 - using an engineers square and a white piece of paper to judge the
>angle
>
>2 - using a digital protractor (the beall tiltbox) - this one stinks
>
>3 - making a cut, turning the piece around, and using the back of the
>blade as a guide.
>
>4 - cutting out an inside shape, and having it slide out in both
>directions.
>
>Nos 3 and 4 seem to be the best ways.... I've been able to get the
>table close, but not perfect. Even when I think I am dead on, I'm not.
>The goal is to achieve #4 - I'm making puzzles out of .75" to 1.5"
>stock, and can't seem to get the pieces to fit together in both
>directions.
That has as much to do with technique as with the setup of the saw.
If you put side pressure on the blade while turning you will deflect
it and you won't get a perpendicular cut. And cutting 1.5" you can
get the blade to bow through the cut such that the top and bottom are
lined up but the middle is off and you can't pull out the offcut in
either direction.
-Kevin
[email protected] wrote:
> P.S. The book I'm getting patterns from says that the author has never
> seen a good leveling system on a scrollsaw, all the way up to the best
> models. Why is that?
Because people are willing to buy 'em without a good leveling system. :)
--
Morris Dovey
DeSoto Solar
DeSoto, Iowa USA
http://www.iedu.com/DeSoto/