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"Porkdog"

28/10/2004 4:59 AM

Review of redline x point setup tool

Hi all,

I recently bought the redline x point setup tool for use in aligning my home
shop machines and wanted to share some observations.

Overall, it sucks. There is very little that is good about the unit except
for the plastic carrying case.
After spending half an evening aligning my table saw with the unit I have
some specific observations. Some notes:

Almost all the machined threads were poorly cut requiring me to chase them
before assembly and useage.

The base extrusion was anything but flat and left marks in my tablesaw
table.

The camming mechanism to remove slop between the bearings and miter slot
loosened every pass up and back down the miter slot requiring me to
retighten it for each measurement run.

The styluses provided for the dial indicator did not seat flush to the end
of the indicator shaft making precision absolute measurement completely
impossible. Which makes any attempt to measure any angle completely
worthless.

When completely extended, the plunger on the dial indicator read .01" short
of 1". This could be fixed with a shim on the back side screw if I were so
inclined.

The finish of the extrusions and machined parts is really poor. Lots of
stray tooling marks and edges with burrs.

With lots of patience and the help of a machinists plate I was able to align
my blade to the miter slot to within .002" (the tolerance of my flat plate).

After my miserable experience trying to use the unit I did a google search
and found a review of the unit at:

http://www.ts-aligner.com/tsjrvsxpoint.htm

After reading the review I can assure you that all the defects the review
found were consistant with what I saw on my unit.

In short, the thing is almost completely worthless. I'd have saved myself
lots of time and trouble if I'd just bought a dial indicator and made my own
alignment fixtures. Buyer beware. And for what it's worth, I have no
affiliation to any company selling anything, woodworking or otherwise.

Hope this helps,
Brian


This topic has 2 replies

eE

[email protected] (Ed Bennett)

in reply to "Porkdog" on 28/10/2004 4:59 AM

29/10/2004 10:54 AM

It's true. Most dial indicators will have a bit of extra travel at
each end of the travel limits. So, a 1" dial indicator should really
have more than 1" of total travel. Usually it's about 0.020" to
0.030" (between 10 and 15 thousandths on each end). I'm not sure from
Brian's description if he is seeing less than 1" total travel or if he
is just noticing this typical overtravel.

I bought one of these "Redline X Point" things too (for the review, of
course!). I can truely empathize with Brian's remorse. Most of the
competitive tools I buy have some redeeming qualities. I think that
the case and the manual are the best aspects of this product. With
regard to it's alignment capabilities, Brian is right: the "dial
indicator on a stick" solution is far superior. He sent me an email
the day before posting his review to express his frustration. I
suggested he try to get his money back. I don't know how that is
going.

Ed Bennett
[email protected]

http://www.ts-aligner.com
Home of the TS-Aligner


"CW" <no adddress@spam free.com> wrote in message news:<[email protected]>...
> With the plunger fully extended, the indicator should not read zero. You
> should have to compress the plunger a short distance (.010 is about right)
> to zero it.
>
> "Porkdog" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:J0%[email protected]...
> > Hi all,
> > When completely extended, the plunger on the dial indicator read .01"
> short
> > of 1". This could be fixed with a shim on the back side screw if I were
> so
> > inclined.

Cn

"CW"

in reply to "Porkdog" on 28/10/2004 4:59 AM

28/10/2004 10:21 PM

With the plunger fully extended, the indicator should not read zero. You
should have to compress the plunger a short distance (.010 is about right)
to zero it.

"Porkdog" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:J0%[email protected]...
> Hi all,
> When completely extended, the plunger on the dial indicator read .01"
short
> of 1". This could be fixed with a shim on the back side screw if I were
so
> inclined.


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