This happens a lot in the automotive industry. One example is that Engine oil consumption is deemed normal by dealerships through the instruction of the corporate "engineers" and lawyers
I bought 5 of them and returned 4 of them. All of them are like that. I kept one and sand it down. Now, the gaps are within .05mm and doesn't wobble anymore.
The way this would be by design is if you level your outriggers on your miter stand to match the center rotating table. Still doesn't make much sense. Sometimes manufacturing mistakes happen
I bought this saw based on all the positive reviews. Other than dust collection and the table problems, it's a great saw. When I talked to bosch, their tech told me, "The table problem is a feature, and this is by design." Then he threw gas on the fire and asked me if the piece was securely clamped down. 🤔
I understand your point. But with long pieces, you will never cut a true 90 if the tables are at different elevations. The second one was delivered to my house, the right table was perfect to the turntable, and the left table was below the turntable. So, in my opinion bosch has problems with their castings. My makita that I decided to go with after returning the bosch is dead flat across the tables. And the Hitachi that I got rod of to upgrade to this saw was dead flat across all the surfaces.
This happens a lot in the automotive industry. One example is that Engine oil consumption is deemed normal by dealerships through the instruction of the corporate "engineers" and lawyers
Don’t blame the engineers. They do what they can with the time and budgets they have. They despise the dipshits above them as much as we all do.
and the company makes a decision to defend it no matter what. It would be too expensive to admit wrongdoing.
I bought 5 of them and returned 4 of them. All of them are like that. I kept one and sand it down. Now, the gaps are within .05mm and doesn't wobble anymore.
The way this would be by design is if you level your outriggers on your miter stand to match the center rotating table. Still doesn't make much sense. Sometimes manufacturing mistakes happen
Here in the uk that would be going back. I was seriously considering one of them over one of my kapex saws. Just wanted more cut capacity.
Weird. I bought one a couple years ago and it doesn't have this problem. I've heard a lot of complaints, but mine has been exceptionally accurate.
I bought this saw based on all the positive reviews. Other than dust collection and the table problems, it's a great saw. When I talked to bosch, their tech told me, "The table problem is a feature, and this is by design." Then he threw gas on the fire and asked me if the piece was securely clamped down. 🤔
Your registration point is the center table not the out side.its proud to limit blade pinch.
I understand your point. But with long pieces, you will never cut a true 90 if the tables are at different elevations. The second one was delivered to my house, the right table was perfect to the turntable, and the left table was below the turntable. So, in my opinion bosch has problems with their castings. My makita that I decided to go with after returning the bosch is dead flat across the tables. And the Hitachi that I got rod of to upgrade to this saw was dead flat across all the surfaces.
One has to account for the wear of the nylon washer under the rotating table
They were all brand new...
Bosch BS. That’s all. I rather spend $2500 on a festool.
I have a new bosch coming on Monday, if it is messed up I'm onto a different brand
Or go get a dewalt dws779 or 780 for around $400 to $650 and be done with it.