pm

"patrick mitchel"

22/01/2007 9:06 AM

table crown in contractors saw- worth fixin?

I have a cheapie (well, it's belt drive so....) chinese 10" table saw that
has a crown that I work around but am getting a bit weary of making
adjustments depending on what I'm cutting. Anyone taken their saw to a
machine shop and had the crown taken out....curious as to the dollars
involved. Thanks in advance Pat


This topic has 3 replies

Dt

Dude

in reply to "patrick mitchel" on 22/01/2007 9:06 AM

22/01/2007 11:23 AM

patrick mitchel wrote:
> I have a cheapie (well, it's belt drive so....) chinese 10" table saw that
> has a crown that I work around but am getting a bit weary of making
> adjustments depending on what I'm cutting. Anyone taken their saw to a
> machine shop and had the crown taken out....curious as to the dollars
> involved. Thanks in advance Pat
>
I had a Chinese table saw once. If it had a crown, I wouldn't try to
force the metal into being straight, I would beat it with a ball pien
hammer until it was concave, then fill the depression with Alumi Lead (a
type of bondo)and sand it perfectly smooth. Slime coat out the bubbles,
and take it down to 400 grit.
Another less violent method would be to heat spots of the crown with a
torch, and then quench the spot with a wet rag, gradually shrinking the
crown. After, use a sanding board to smooth out any little imperfections.

c

in reply to "patrick mitchel" on 22/01/2007 9:06 AM

22/01/2007 7:45 PM

I would get a piece of thick hardwood as long as the longest dimension
of your table saw top. Joint one edge perfectly straight (use a
friend's jointer if you don't have one). Place a thickness of index
cards that is 2-3 times the height of the crown right on the center of
the top's crown. Put the piece of hardwood across your table and over
the crown (and cards), and clamp one edge. Now slowly clamp the other
edge. Remove it and check the crown. Adjust the process until the
crown is reduced and the saw is usable.

CI has a memory, so you have to experiment with how far you push it,
because the crown will come back to a degree.

And all of this assumes you have made certain there are no root causes
of the crown (like, the trunions were machined straight and stuff).

BTW, how far out is it?

You can PayPal the money I saved you to cgallery (at) yahoo (dot) com.

patrick mitchel wrote:
> I have a cheapie (well, it's belt drive so....) chinese 10" table saw that
> has a crown that I work around but am getting a bit weary of making
> adjustments depending on what I'm cutting. Anyone taken their saw to a
> machine shop and had the crown taken out....curious as to the dollars
> involved. Thanks in advance Pat

pm

"patrick mitchel"

in reply to "patrick mitchel" on 22/01/2007 9:06 AM

23/01/2007 6:47 AM


<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I would get a piece of thick hardwood as long as the longest dimension
> of your table saw top. Joint one edge perfectly straight (use a
> friend's jointer if you don't have one). Place a thickness of index
> cards that is 2-3 times the height of the crown right on the center of
> the top's crown. Put the piece of hardwood across your table and over
> the crown (and cards), and clamp one edge. Now slowly clamp the other
> edge. Remove it and check the crown. Adjust the process until the
> crown is reduced and the saw is usable.
>
> CI has a memory, so you have to experiment with how far you push it,
> because the crown will come back to a degree.
>
> And all of this assumes you have made certain there are no root causes
> of the crown (like, the trunions were machined straight and stuff).
>
> BTW, how far out is it?
>
> You can PayPal the money I saved you to cgallery (at) yahoo (dot) com.

Thanks for the reply , I bought the tablesaw new about 20 yrs ago and never
bother to determine the root cause of the crown.I worked round the problem
by always checking for square by making a final check before I made the cut
(if it was a cutoff on the left side of the blade, I'd move the blade
slightly to adjust for the slight crown, If a cut in half, the blade
adjusted against the stop made for a square cut. If I lay a decent straight
edge over the top, perpendicular to the miter slot, it has perhaps a 1/8"
crown (shows about a 1/4" with one side of the straight edge held down). I
haven't taken the saw apart to look at the trunnions. Was surprised to hear
that cast iron is capable of being moved around a bit. Will play around a
bit as I have some thick wall square tubing that I welded back to back for a
homemade flattening jig that might prove useful in attempting to persuade
the ci to move to where I'd like it to be... Thanks Pat


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