Great Video, I really enjoyed the feeling that the video was made by someone honestly trying to help solve a common problem with many table saws, without sponsorship.
Great job. I have the same miter on my table saw. I didn't have the side to side play, but I didn't like that littl squaty lock down knob. I turned a a piece of 6" cherry on the lathe, drilled a small hole to accommodate a coupling nut, and screwed it on the locking bolt. Now I have a nice handle.
I was actually searching for a video on a crosscut sled and came across this video. It's not to often you run across those saws made in Canada. Once they were the highest priced of the big three...... Delta..... Powermatic and my favorite The General 350!! I wouldn't trade it for two of the others!!
the crappy miter gauges and fences which comes with a cheap table saw is a real pain in the ass and i'm grateful 4 every decent and inexpensive solution.
@@JeffFischer1 i was more talking about my tablesaw.but even the upper-class saws here in germany that costs ~ € 800+ often need a few improvements, which is actually a cheek. in this price-class you should have little to nothing to complain about.it's hard as a hobbycraftsmen to pay so much for a halfway reasonable tablesaw.
@@JeffFischer1 exactly.have recently seen that a dude built himself with a simple medium panel saw like the one from the do-it-yourself store, but it didn't cost € 30k+. he later built an genuis but simple extension for 45° cuts.and i think that the materials was under € 1k.a submersible circular saw wooden slats a few osb plates, a few pulleys,a few knee levers some wire counterweights in a selfmade wooden box,a few stainless steel pipes and aluminium profiles and self-adhesive tape,a few meters extension cable,screws and a few rollers on which the construction stood..and the idea and plan 2 built it
Great Video, I really enjoyed the feeling that the video was made by someone honestly trying to help solve a common problem with many table saws, without sponsorship.
Thanks Derek.
Great job. I have the same miter on my table saw. I didn't have the side to side play, but I didn't like that littl squaty lock down knob. I turned a a piece of 6" cherry on the lathe, drilled a small hole to accommodate a coupling nut, and screwed it on the locking bolt. Now I have a nice handle.
I'm jealous, but I'm not a turner so I can let that one go. Thanks for watching!
I had the same thought. Great to see I wasn't too far off the mark. Thanks for posting.
Thanks for watching mikes.
i liked . thank you. i am from Brazil. I'm learning this art from the joinery.
Thanks for watching and have fun with the craft.
I was actually searching for a video on a crosscut sled and came across this video. It's not to often you run across those saws made in Canada. Once they were the highest priced of the big three...... Delta..... Powermatic and my favorite The General 350!! I wouldn't trade it for two of the others!!
You're preaching to the choir. Thanks for watching. I actually bought mine in Drummondville, Quebec, Canada and brought it back home.
I have the same issue. Going to try your exact fix
Good luck John and thanks for watching.
the crappy miter gauges and fences which comes with a cheap table saw is a real pain in the ass and i'm grateful 4 every decent and inexpensive solution.
Well this table saw is not a cheap one but the miter gauge on most saws is an after thought. Thanks for watching.
@@JeffFischer1 i was more talking about my tablesaw.but even the upper-class saws here in germany that costs ~ € 800+ often need a few improvements, which is actually a cheek. in this price-class you should have little to nothing to complain about.it's hard as a hobbycraftsmen to pay so much for a halfway reasonable tablesaw.
@@duczman76 Could not agree more. When you think about it. They are not that complicated of a machine.
@@JeffFischer1 exactly.have recently seen that a dude built himself with a simple medium panel saw like the one from the do-it-yourself store, but it didn't cost € 30k+. he later built an genuis but simple extension for 45° cuts.and i think that the materials was under € 1k.a submersible circular saw wooden slats a few osb plates, a few pulleys,a few knee levers some wire counterweights in a selfmade wooden box,a few stainless steel pipes and aluminium profiles and self-adhesive tape,a few meters extension cable,screws and a few rollers on which the construction stood..and the idea and plan 2 built it
@@duczman76 where there's a will there's a way
Hola Jeff Fischer, buenos días, muy buen vídeo, Saludos.
Thanks Charly, I appreciate your comment and watching.
Thanks
You're welcome, Thanks for watching.
Where did you get the magnet at
www.weldersupply.com/C/208/Magswitch Thanks for watching.
Amazon magswitch