Dd

"DGDevin"

26/10/2009 12:27 AM

Emerson close-out at Harbor Freight?

I have several of the Emerson clamp-on cutting guides in various lengths,
I've found them easy to use and of high quality and they've done good work
for me guiding circular saws and routers. At a local Harbor Freight today I
noticed there were no more Emerson guides on display, but the clearance
section had two 36" versions still new in the box priced at $4.97.
Considering these things formerly sold for around thirty bucks that strikes
me as a good deal--I grabbed them both. I think I'll visit the other nearby
locations to see if they have additional lengths still in stock, at that
price even SWMBO approved. So if you think you could use a cutting guide
and there is a HF in your area it might be worth giving them a call....


This topic has 3 replies

Dd

"DGDevin"

in reply to "DGDevin" on 26/10/2009 12:27 AM

26/10/2009 2:46 PM

-MIKE- wrote:
> DGDevin wrote:
>> I have several of the Emerson clamp-on cutting guides in various
>> lengths, I've found them easy to use and of high quality and they've
>> done good work for me guiding circular saws and routers. At a local
>> Harbor Freight today I noticed there were no more Emerson guides on
>> display, but the clearance section had two 36" versions still new in
>> the box priced at $4.97. Considering these things formerly sold for
>> around thirty bucks that strikes me as a good deal--I grabbed them
>> both. I think I'll visit the other nearby locations to see if they
>> have additional lengths still in stock, at that price even SWMBO
>> approved. So if you think you could use a cutting guide and there
>> is a HF in your area it might be worth giving them a call....
>
> I bought two of those from Woodcraft and had to return them.
> It might have been a bad lot, I don't know.
>
> The problem was that they seemed to develop a "memory" at the location
> at which I had to repeatedly clamp several times.
>
> I was cutting plywood and clamping at 48", repeatedly. It seemed like
> the clamp was digging it a little to the metal rod. And with each
> successive clamping, it would slip back a tiny bit. After several
> clampings, it would not hold at the same distance any longer.
>
> So to whoever might buy those, just keep that in mind and check it out
> before the return time is expired.

It could be that clamping the jaws in place extra-tight causes that, I
managed to make those marks on the rod one time but without it leading to
problems. Once I eased-up on how tight I was trying to set the jaws in
place before flipping the lever the guides have worked fine (for over a
year). My guess is if you have to really lean on that lever to lock the
jaws then the jaws are a bit too tight. My impression is that like many
tools there is a sweet spot, and once you figure it out it becomes
second-nature.

Mm

-MIKE-

in reply to "DGDevin" on 26/10/2009 12:27 AM

26/10/2009 11:39 AM

DGDevin wrote:
> I have several of the Emerson clamp-on cutting guides in various lengths,
> I've found them easy to use and of high quality and they've done good work
> for me guiding circular saws and routers. At a local Harbor Freight today I
> noticed there were no more Emerson guides on display, but the clearance
> section had two 36" versions still new in the box priced at $4.97.
> Considering these things formerly sold for around thirty bucks that strikes
> me as a good deal--I grabbed them both. I think I'll visit the other nearby
> locations to see if they have additional lengths still in stock, at that
> price even SWMBO approved. So if you think you could use a cutting guide
> and there is a HF in your area it might be worth giving them a call....
>

I bought two of those from Woodcraft and had to return them.
It might have been a bad lot, I don't know.

The problem was that they seemed to develop a "memory" at the location
at which I had to repeatedly clamp several times.

I was cutting plywood and clamping at 48", repeatedly. It seemed like the
clamp was digging it a little to the metal rod. And with each successive
clamping, it would slip back a tiny bit. After several clampings, it
would not hold at the same distance any longer.

So to whoever might buy those, just keep that in mind and check it out
before the return time is expired.


--

-MIKE-

"Playing is not something I do at night, it's my function in life"
--Elvin Jones (1927-2004)
--
http://mikedrums.com
[email protected]
---remove "DOT" ^^^^ to reply

Mm

-MIKE-

in reply to "DGDevin" on 26/10/2009 12:27 AM

26/10/2009 5:03 PM

DGDevin wrote:
> It could be that clamping the jaws in place extra-tight causes that, I
> managed to make those marks on the rod one time but without it leading to
> problems. Once I eased-up on how tight I was trying to set the jaws in
> place before flipping the lever the guides have worked fine (for over a
> year). My guess is if you have to really lean on that lever to lock the
> jaws then the jaws are a bit too tight. My impression is that like many
> tools there is a sweet spot, and once you figure it out it becomes
> second-nature.
>

LOL

Right before I hit send on that post, I almost typed, "and no, I wasn't
clamping too tightly." :-)

When it happened on the first clamp I bought, I took it back and
discussed it with Woodcraft. We came to the conclusion that I should try
just pushing the lever to the first position (there are two).

On the new clamp, I did that and got the same results.

Like I said, it may have been a bad lot or something.
I just wanted to warn people to check it out before the return time is up.


--

-MIKE-

"Playing is not something I do at night, it's my function in life"
--Elvin Jones (1927-2004)
--
http://mikedrums.com
[email protected]
---remove "DOT" ^^^^ to reply


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