VB

"Vic Baron"

23/06/2005 2:56 AM

Tablesaw problem

I have an old Craftsman tablesaw circa 1950's that I've used for years with
no problems. I have a strange thing happening on cutting and I'm puzzled. If
I cut from the right side of the blade ( a W.W.II , link belts, etc. ) I get
a perfectly smooth cut. If I cut from the left side of the blade I get a
smooth cut BUT I have a few upward ( rear teeth) burn marks on the main
piece. I've checked for square, marked a tooth and checked distance from
miter slot - nothing seems unusual. I obviously am missing something.

Any suggestions of what and how to check? I have a dial indicator but other
than that just the usual ww tools.

The upward burn mark would lead me to believe that the rear teeth are closer
than the front teeth but I just don't see it when I check.

Only thing I haven't tried - I have a new W.W.II blade. They both are thin
kerf - I wonder if the older blade has somehow twisted a bit? If it has, how
does one fix that - send it back to Forrest?

Thanx

Vic Baron

--
There are 10 kinds of people - those who understand binary and those who
don't


This topic has 6 replies

Sb

"SonomaProducts.com"

in reply to "Vic Baron" on 23/06/2005 2:56 AM

22/06/2005 8:06 PM

It sounds like maybe the table top isn't flat on the one side.

sD

[email protected] (Doug Miller)

in reply to "Vic Baron" on 23/06/2005 2:56 AM

23/06/2005 12:20 PM

In article <[email protected]>, "Vic Baron" <[email protected]> wrote:
>I have an old Craftsman tablesaw circa 1950's that I've used for years with
>no problems. I have a strange thing happening on cutting and I'm puzzled. If
>I cut from the right side of the blade ( a W.W.II , link belts, etc. ) I get
>a perfectly smooth cut. If I cut from the left side of the blade I get a
>smooth cut BUT I have a few upward ( rear teeth) burn marks on the main
>piece. I've checked for square, marked a tooth and checked distance from
>miter slot - nothing seems unusual. I obviously am missing something.

Sounds to me like your left miter slot is not perfectly parallel to the blade.
When you aligned the saw, I'm betting you checked the alignment of the *right*
miter slot with the blade.

Or perhaps the blade is damaged on the left side. Have you checked each
individual tooth? If you're over the age of 40, use a magnifying glass. :-)
DAMHIKT.

--
Regards,
Doug Miller (alphageek at milmac dot com)

Nobody ever left footprints in the sands of time by sitting on his butt.
And who wants to leave buttprints in the sands of time?

Sa

"SBO"

in reply to "Vic Baron" on 23/06/2005 2:56 AM

22/06/2005 11:27 PM

Maybe some ball bearings need to be replaced (?)
Do you have the same problem with another blade ? It look like a blade who
was sharpened twice on the same side by mistake.
If you find the problem, let us know.
Good luck !
S.B.
"Vic Baron" <[email protected]> a écrit dans le message de news:
[email protected]...
>I have an old Craftsman tablesaw circa 1950's that I've used for years with
>no problems. I have a strange thing happening on cutting and I'm puzzled.
>If I cut from the right side of the blade ( a W.W.II , link belts, etc. ) I
>get a perfectly smooth cut. If I cut from the left side of the blade I get
>a smooth cut BUT I have a few upward ( rear teeth) burn marks on the main
>piece. I've checked for square, marked a tooth and checked distance from
>miter slot - nothing seems unusual. I obviously am missing something.
>
> Any suggestions of what and how to check? I have a dial indicator but
> other than that just the usual ww tools.
>
> The upward burn mark would lead me to believe that the rear teeth are
> closer than the front teeth but I just don't see it when I check.
>
> Only thing I haven't tried - I have a new W.W.II blade. They both are thin
> kerf - I wonder if the older blade has somehow twisted a bit? If it has,
> how does one fix that - send it back to Forrest?
>
> Thanx
>
> Vic Baron
>
> --
> There are 10 kinds of people - those who understand binary and those who
> don't
>
>

DD

David

in reply to "Vic Baron" on 23/06/2005 2:56 AM

22/06/2005 8:03 PM

I leaned on my WWII when I noticed it wobbling a bit. I determined
which way the blade was out, and applied counter pressure with my hands.
I did that while it was in the Unisaw. It doesn't take much pressure
to affect the trueness of the blade. I checked it with a dial indicator,
and voila, it was only a couple thousandths out of true.

Dave

Vic Baron wrote:

> I have an old Craftsman tablesaw circa 1950's that I've used for years with
> no problems. I have a strange thing happening on cutting and I'm puzzled. If
> I cut from the right side of the blade ( a W.W.II , link belts, etc. ) I get
> a perfectly smooth cut. If I cut from the left side of the blade I get a
> smooth cut BUT I have a few upward ( rear teeth) burn marks on the main
> piece. I've checked for square, marked a tooth and checked distance from
> miter slot - nothing seems unusual. I obviously am missing something.
>
> Any suggestions of what and how to check? I have a dial indicator but other
> than that just the usual ww tools.
>
> The upward burn mark would lead me to believe that the rear teeth are closer
> than the front teeth but I just don't see it when I check.
>
> Only thing I haven't tried - I have a new W.W.II blade. They both are thin
> kerf - I wonder if the older blade has somehow twisted a bit? If it has, how
> does one fix that - send it back to Forrest?
>
> Thanx
>
> Vic Baron
>

VB

"Vic Baron"

in reply to "Vic Baron" on 23/06/2005 2:56 AM

23/06/2005 6:06 PM


"Doug Miller" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> In article <[email protected]>, "Vic Baron"
<[email protected]> wrote:
> >I have an old Craftsman tablesaw circa 1950's that I've used for years
with
> >no problems. I have a strange thing happening on cutting and I'm puzzled.
If
> >I cut from the right side of the blade ( a W.W.II , link belts, etc. ) I
get
> >a perfectly smooth cut. If I cut from the left side of the blade I get a
> >smooth cut BUT I have a few upward ( rear teeth) burn marks on the main
> >piece. I've checked for square, marked a tooth and checked distance from
> >miter slot - nothing seems unusual. I obviously am missing something.
>
> Sounds to me like your left miter slot is not perfectly parallel to the
blade.
> When you aligned the saw, I'm betting you checked the alignment of the
*right*
> miter slot with the blade.
>
> Or perhaps the blade is damaged on the left side. Have you checked each
> individual tooth? If you're over the age of 40, use a magnifying glass.
:-)
> DAMHIKT.
>

Nobody likes a smartass, Dave...:)

But I DO happen to have a magnifying glass available. Good thought.

When I get home I'm going to put the brand new WWII in and see what happens.

Thanx to all

VB

"Vic Baron"

in reply to "Vic Baron" on 23/06/2005 2:56 AM

24/06/2005 1:18 AM

Problem solved. Seems that there are 6 trunion bolts in the early craftsman
series. Made my own sled for the dial indicator. Found the rear teeth offset
about .010" ( ten thousandths). After loosening all six bolts and tapping
for a bit, got it to within .001" after tightening. Made test cuts from both
sides - I am a happy camper now. Tomorrow I'll check the alignment and
calibration on my fence.

Thanx,

Vic


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