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Thread: Tablesaw Feeding
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18th January 2006, 02:04 PM #61Originally Posted by EastieBlowin in the Wind
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18th January 2006, 03:55 PM #62
Sorry if that was a bit blunt Redwood, your point is taken that you're not specifcally recommending your way to people.
The guard gives a level of psychological separation from the blade. This has both positive and negative points:
Good - it makes the user less afraid of the tool allowign them to concentrate on what they're doing.
Bad - It can create false confidence that the guard is going to protect them from every risk.
It surprises me that no one has redesigned the a tabel saw with integral push blocks, feather boards etc running in slots. Surely there is a way to provide force to a board in a certain direction without directly using your hands.....Cheers,
Adam
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I can cure you of your Sinistrophobia
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18th January 2006, 04:06 PM #63Surely there is a way to provide force to a board in a certain direction without directly using your hands.
I disagree that guards are always dangerous. I agree that they can make certain tasks more dangerous though - particularly in the case you mention where someone attempts to use a push stick that wont fit between the fence and the guard.
The best way of cutting thin strips is to cut them from a much wider board. You set the fence so that the strip you want is the offcut, allowing you plenty of room between the fence and the blade. This is not always possible though.
In that situation, I have a push stick that is 10mm thick and about 90mm x 250mm in size with a notch cut out of the bottom creating a hook about 5mm deep and 25mm long. I remove the guard, wind the blade down low and fit a zero clearance insert with a splitter attached. The push stick sits over whatever you are ripping, allowing you to hold it down and against the fence and the hook allows you to push the stock through."I don't practice what I preach because I'm not the kind of person I'm preaching to."
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18th January 2006, 04:19 PM #64Originally Posted by LineLefty
“Statistically you are more likely to be hurt by sitting in a car then using a tablesaw”
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18th January 2006, 04:47 PM #65.
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Originally Posted by silentC
I have a board thats 125 wide (marine ply) with an end (similar to a breadboard end) that i screw on, overhanging 5 or so mill. I set the fence at 125 + the strip thickness. Then i place the board to be ripped againsed it and safley push it through. My hands are 125mm away from the blade, and when the strip is cut i just repeat, repeat and repeat. All the strips are the same thickness, fence dosnt have to be moved and no hand is nearer than125 from the blade
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18th January 2006, 06:20 PM #66Originally Posted by Lignum
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18th January 2006, 06:43 PM #67Originally Posted by Wongo
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18th January 2006, 06:46 PM #68Originally Posted by Lignum
Rats! I was going to send a Greenie, but have to do some manure spreading first :eek:
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18th January 2006, 06:56 PM #69.
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Originally Posted by Auld Bassoon
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18th January 2006, 07:05 PM #70Member
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I tend to go with your scenario one- as you can apply pressure on stock to the fence- I always look at the fence and the timber in relation to the fence when feedin through. Use a push pad or stick if you feel uncomfortable getting your hands too close and make sure your blade has a guard and riving knife. A sliding table negates having to push stock.
Be comfortable in your stance and go slowly. If you are unhappy about anything, don't do it- it is probably wrong for you.
By feeding sheet material as per scenario 1, you can comfortably cut a 8x4 sheet on your own.
cheers rosethorn
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19th January 2006, 08:28 AM #71Originally Posted by Lignum"I don't practice what I preach because I'm not the kind of person I'm preaching to."
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19th January 2006, 10:07 AM #72
Hi there,
I know we started talking about the feeding operation, so we're slightly hijacking it onto guards!
I understand what Redwood's saying regarding guards, but I still wouldn't remove one permanently. If anything, they give the impression you could fall onto the machine and not get cut in half! My small saw at home is a Durden Junior Joiner, with a guard that rises in a slot on the riving knife...not satisfactory, as its not always easy to get to rise when you push the timber through. This means you have to take one hand off the timber and pull the guard up, and obviously expose yourself to the blade. The sliding table saw at work I fitted with an expensive aftermarket guard, with built in dust extraction. Its mounted well off-board, so no problems fitting sheet material through. But the actual perspex guard thing is supposed to move up and down through levers and counterweights when timber enters, but not always easily, esp. if only one side of it is contacted by the workpiece (ie. when taking a small offcut). If the fence is to be pushed close to the blade, you have to raise the guard up by hand and drop it onto the fence, thereby rendering the guard useless as most of the blade is exposed!:confused: I think there is lots of opportunity to develop one that really does what its meant too.
Just one thing though:
Originally Posted by redwood
Cheers,Andy Mac
Change is inevitable, growth is optional.
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19th January 2006, 10:32 AM #73Surely you mean freehanding through a tablesaw being risky, as bandsaws come into their own when freehand cutting of curves!"I don't practice what I preach because I'm not the kind of person I'm preaching to."
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19th January 2006, 11:01 AM #74
I have a Taunton DVD of Sam Maloof - well worth a look. The joints for the leg-seat are masterful.
This man's fliuidity of motion when cutting on the bandsaw and tablesaw is both alarming and inspiring at the same time. He draws chinagraph lines on the workpiece, and goes for it freeform on the bandsaw. The workpiece is sometimes suspended by it's end, a foot or more away from the blade, with 2-3" of air under the piece at the blade. Sort of carving with the blade.
The 12" tablesaw has no guard or dust extraction (I think). He ripped 5 pieces of walnut for the seat of a rocker in seconds. No push sticks for this bloke, mate. Reaching over the blade and all, standing behind - astonishing. He makes 60-70 pieces a year. BTW his rockers change hands for over $US150K. Bloody amazing woodworker, quick, efficient, but I couldnt make myself do it quite like that.The only way to get rid of a [Domino] temptation is to yield to it. Oscar Wilde
.....so go4it people!
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19th January 2006, 11:04 AM #75
Grrrripper
I forgot - check these out Lefty - they may answer all of your worries about ripping. I really like using them, they feel really safe and secure.
http://www.leevalley.com/wood/page.a...080,51225&ap=1The only way to get rid of a [Domino] temptation is to yield to it. Oscar Wilde
.....so go4it people!
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