Wanted to trim a 33" panel down to size and was fortunate enough to learn
that the Jet Supersaw has a generous, near 34" rip capacity to the right,
depsite the advertised 30".
A thought that ran through my head, before I saw I had the capacity, was
that I'd never put the fence to the left of the blade. And, I supposed
that someday, I could slide my existing '30"' rails to the right and gain
maybe another foot of rip capacity.
A lesser fool would pop for the 52" rails, I suppose. But this was all
"head thinkin'" anyway.
Am I the only one who's never "dressed left"?
I mean, I *do* dress left, but this time I'm talking about my fence!
Am I missing out on some grand super-productivity shortcut?
Am I wearing out one side of my fence prematurely?
What if I slide if over and it gets stuck that way?
> Am I missing out on some grand super-productivity shortcut?
probably not
> Am I wearing out one side of my fence prematurely?
wearing one side, yes - prematurely, no
> What if I slide if over and it gets stuck that way?
lower the blade again...
I'm sure I'm in the minority, but I have more rip capacity to the left than to
the right. This gives me great support for the more typical cut - ripping
smaller pieces off a large sheet. A picture is at:
http://home.san.rr.com/jeffnann/WoodWorking/WoodWorking.html
The saw was already mounted in the table this way when I inherited it, but I
like the arrangement. I think one gets used to any setup that does the work
that's needed.
Note: if you rip on both sides, then the blade should be dead on square to the
fence, no "toe out" allowed...
--
JeffB
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