Synopsis:
Fatally flawed tool, good customer support.
Long Version:
I ws disappointed with the miter gauge that came with my new table saw
(not surprising) and went to my local woodcraft to get some sort of
aftermarket gauge. Looked at the osborne, Kreg and the Incra 1000.
Salesduud pushed strongly toward the Incra but I didn't like all the
crap on it. Too much adjustment, too much whizbang. I wanted a
highly accurate miter gauge with a reasonably long miter slot bar and
fence. That's all. Not a buncha pull this out, set that, adjust
this. Finally grabbed the Kreg.
My big bitch was that the entire miter head would tilt toward the
locking handle when it was tightened, rendering the fence more than 90
degrees to the table! Not a problem with a cut 90 degrees to the
fence but any non 90 degree cut was f'd. I took a 1/4 nylon washer
and sanded it down 'til it fit on the bolt for the handle between the
head and the bar to prevent the tilt of the head. This worked but
seemed like I shouldn't have had to do it given the name, "Precision",
and the cost, ~$150.
Additionally, it appeared that the 22.5 degree hole drilled in the
head was wrong (more on this later).
I contacted Kreg and they sent me a brand new bar and head unit which
arrived yesterday. Put the locking handle in, put the gauge in the
slot, tightened the handle and checked for square to the table. It
appears that they have tightened up the connection between the bar and
the head. MUCH better than the prior one but still went out of square
to a small degree. So I took the nylon washer out of the old one and
put it in the new one and this fixed it.
Checked the 22.5 degree hole. Still out of whack! Checked the 30
degree hole. Good. 90 is good. 45 is good. Starting to doubt my
setup gauge. Do some measurements and some math and holy crap, my
freaking setup gauge is f'd at the 22.5 degree corner!
Nice. Thanks for the killer setup gauge, Woodcraft.
Anyhoo, so my new gauge works (with mods). But I am seriously
thinking about returning the one to WC and the other to Kreg. As that
washer wears, the angles will start to degrade with the tilt of the
head as I tighten the locking handle. And I am going to feel like I
have to do all sorts of checking and setup with this gauge now too.
And that contradicts the reason I bought the thing in the first place.
D'ohBoy
"D'ohBoy" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:0167c358-a2d4-4db2-bdbd-9097c99c1e6c@m15g2000vbl.googlegroups.com...
> Synopsis:
>
> Fatally flawed tool, good customer support.
>
$150 for a miter gauge that isn't accurate??
That is a no brainer for me. I would take the money and make up a bunch of
table saw sleds.
And why do the saw manufacturers provide such crappy miter gauges anyway?
They should just withold the crap. Maybe even sell a good one as an
accessory.
On Jan 12, 12:44=A0pm, "Dave" <[email protected]> wrote:
> "dzin" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>
> news:0fce482f-2250-4f08-9447-bbc12bf7386a@z28g2000prd.googlegroups.com...=
> Try this:http://miterset.home.comcast.net/~miterset/index.html
>
> Have you looked at the Osborne? I like mine. I believe Norm uses one too.
At the recent WW show in baltimore, they had the Kreg miter with a
flip stop for $99. It didn't have the blue anodized coating and came
in a plain generic box.
Seemed like a good deal, but I use sleds mainly for fussy miters.
On Jan 8, 11:15=A0am, Pat Barber <[email protected]> wrote:
> A wee drive by....
Just a very small one. It's not like they're in my basement!
JP
I had similar problems going through the search for a simple but accurate
miter gauge. If you eventually end up looking at the Osborne set the gauge
up to cut a 45 with the telescoping arm in its fully extended position.
You will probably find that the fence will wiggle 2-3 degrees in that
particular 45 degree setting. I went through 3 or 4 at the dealer and gave
up on the Osborne. It is inherently flawed in that respect.
I had similar feelings about the Incra as you did. I ended up with the Kreg
except the index holes were drilled too big and the indexing pin would not
lock in at the desired setting and you always had to visually verify the
setting. Kreg finally pulled on off the assembly line and tested the pin
fit and then sent me that one. I have been very pleased ever since, about 4
years.
"D'ohBoy" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:0167c358-a2d4-4db2-bdbd-9097c99c1e6c@m15g2000vbl.googlegroups.com...
> Synopsis:
>
> Fatally flawed tool, good customer support.
>
> Long Version:
>
> I ws disappointed with the miter gauge that came with my new table saw
> (not surprising) and went to my local woodcraft to get some sort of
> aftermarket gauge. Looked at the osborne, Kreg and the Incra 1000.
> Salesduud pushed strongly toward the Incra but I didn't like all the
> crap on it. Too much adjustment, too much whizbang. I wanted a
> highly accurate miter gauge with a reasonably long miter slot bar and
> fence. That's all. Not a buncha pull this out, set that, adjust
> this. Finally grabbed the Kreg.
>
> My big bitch was that the entire miter head would tilt toward the
> locking handle when it was tightened, rendering the fence more than 90
> degrees to the table! Not a problem with a cut 90 degrees to the
> fence but any non 90 degree cut was f'd. I took a 1/4 nylon washer
> and sanded it down 'til it fit on the bolt for the handle between the
> head and the bar to prevent the tilt of the head. This worked but
> seemed like I shouldn't have had to do it given the name, "Precision",
> and the cost, ~$150.
>
> Additionally, it appeared that the 22.5 degree hole drilled in the
> head was wrong (more on this later).
>
> I contacted Kreg and they sent me a brand new bar and head unit which
> arrived yesterday. Put the locking handle in, put the gauge in the
> slot, tightened the handle and checked for square to the table. It
> appears that they have tightened up the connection between the bar and
> the head. MUCH better than the prior one but still went out of square
> to a small degree. So I took the nylon washer out of the old one and
> put it in the new one and this fixed it.
>
> Checked the 22.5 degree hole. Still out of whack! Checked the 30
> degree hole. Good. 90 is good. 45 is good. Starting to doubt my
> setup gauge. Do some measurements and some math and holy crap, my
> freaking setup gauge is f'd at the 22.5 degree corner!
>
> Nice. Thanks for the killer setup gauge, Woodcraft.
>
> Anyhoo, so my new gauge works (with mods). But I am seriously
> thinking about returning the one to WC and the other to Kreg. As that
> washer wears, the angles will start to degrade with the tilt of the
> head as I tighten the locking handle. And I am going to feel like I
> have to do all sorts of checking and setup with this gauge now too.
> And that contradicts the reason I bought the thing in the first place.
>
> D'ohBoy
"Lee Michaels" <leemichaels*nadaspam*@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> "D'ohBoy" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:0167c358-a2d4-4db2-bdbd-9097c99c1e6c@m15g2000vbl.googlegroups.com...
>> Synopsis:
>>
>> Fatally flawed tool, good customer support.
>>
> $150 for a miter gauge that isn't accurate??
>
> That is a no brainer for me. I would take the money and make up a bunch
> of table saw sleds.
>
> And why do the saw manufacturers provide such crappy miter gauges anyway?
> They should just withold the crap. Maybe even sell a good one as an
> accessory.
I have the left and right Inline Dubby miter sleds, they are dead on
accurate and work very well. Still, if you only need to square up the end
of a board the miter gauge is a lot more convenient to grab and put away for
those quick cuts.
On Jan 7, 10:05=A0am, "Lee Michaels" <leemichaels*[email protected]>
wrote:
> "D'ohBoy" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>
> news:0167c358-a2d4-4db2-bdbd-9097c99c1e6c@m15g2000vbl.googlegroups.com...=
> Synopsis:
>
> > Fatally flawed tool, good customer support.
>
> $150 for a miter gauge that isn't accurate??
>
> That is a no brainer for me. =A0I would take the money and make up a bunc=
h of
> table saw sleds.
>
> And why do the saw manufacturers provide such crappy miter gauges anyway?
> They should just withold the crap. =A0Maybe even sell a good one as an
> accessory.
I'd second the 'sleds' suggestion, unless for some reason you need to
do many different angles. If it's 3 to 5, then just build a sled for
each.
On Jan 7, 6:03=A0pm, "Leon" <[email protected]> wrote:
> "Lee Michaels" <leemichaels*[email protected]> wrote in message
>
> news:[email protected]...
>
>
>
> > "D'ohBoy" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> >news:0167c358-a2d4-4db2-bdbd-9097c99c1e6c@m15g2000vbl.googlegroups.com..=
.
> >> Synopsis:
>
> >> Fatally flawed tool, good customer support.
>
> > $150 for a miter gauge that isn't accurate??
>
> > That is a no brainer for me. =A0I would take the money and make up a bu=
nch
> > of table saw sleds.
>
> > And why do the saw manufacturers provide such crappy miter gauges anywa=
y?
> > They should just withold the crap. =A0Maybe even sell a good one as an
> > accessory.
>
> I have the left and right Inline Dubby miter sleds, they are dead on
> accurate and work very well. =A0Still, if you only need to square up the =
end
> of a board the miter gauge is a lot more convenient to grab and put away =
for
> those quick cuts.
I had one of the Incra miter gauges for about 2 days then I returned
it. Now my miters are by Omga or Altendorf. <G,D&R>
JP
"dzin" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:0fce482f-2250-4f08-9447-bbc12bf7386a@z28g2000prd.googlegroups.com...
> Try this: http://miterset.home.comcast.net/~miterset/index.html
>
Have you looked at the Osborne? I like mine. I believe Norm uses one too.