Homemade Edging Shoe for the Sliding Table Saw
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- Опубликовано: 8 фев 2025
- I made an edging shoe for my sliding table saw rather than buy one to save some money. It turned out really solid.
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Enjoy the video!
I always want to run to the shop and make something after watching your videos.
Jay Bates Yeah, goal achieved :)
All your proyects are very precise and neat, Marius. As always. And not because now you have more and better tolos, before, with less and cheaper tolos, you been doing it just as good. Love your chanel!
TheLaoruga Thank you! Really appreciated.
Great clip…
I want to buy a Hammer K3 table saw and your clips using the the K3 are very helpful.
You are the only person on UTube talking about this machine in English that I can find.
Of course Felder has English clips but it's their machine.
I hope you make more clips about using the K3 and tell us what you think is good or not so good about it.
These videos are getting better and better, great work! Love the little things, like the glue bead in reverse, that make it that bit more enjoyable. I see a certain amount of Matthias Wandel in your work, and that can only be a good thing.. keep it up!
jh112323 Thanks man!
Great video man. It's cool seeing how much you do in a small space.
Marius, I love watching your videos. Felder should definitely sponsor you. I told my Felder (USA) representative, I was sold on their products by just watching you use your new Hammer sliding table saw. Your videos make me salivate at the thought of buying a Hammer or Felder.
+Welsh Rabbit same here! I heard about the brand before and saw different machines in other youtube videos but when thinking about buying one or several machines its always reassuring to see a guy like Marius being happy with his investment !
I'll probably never have to make one but still your video was interesting because of the process you use to solve problems.
Love the bloopers, keep them please. We are all human. 😂😂
Dude this is awesome. You are super skilled; you showed great problem solving and the video editing was awesome. Keep it up!
Clemens Beck Thank you Clemens!
Very clever Marius.
I had never seen a jig like that before.
Nice job. It gave me some inspiration. I've made also one - almost the same.Thanks for project. Hope to see some more projects on your Hammer. It is almost exceptional to find some woodworking projects on a Hammer - except Hammers' own publicity. :-)
Nice job and I enjoyed the out takes since we all have them. Cheers!
It amazes me what jig you come up with next?? How do you think of all these jigs? where do you get your ideas from?
Great Video as always Marius,
Take Care,
Barry from England.
Barry Roberts Thanks Barry. This jig wasn't my invention. I only wanted to make it myself instead of buying it.
The result looks very well done. Great video, too!
A pleasure to watch as always
richard raesr Thanks Richard!
I LOVE shop projects!!
After spending untold hours milling rough chainsaw cut lumber with a traditional american style table saw just this one feature would have saved me weeks of work.
Good video and refreshing to see the out takes. Regards.
Ron Cooper Thank you Ron!
Killing me with this awesome tablesaw. If you demonstrate anymore of it's capability, I could end up being very poor soon...
Andy Midd Sorry in advance... :)
2:25 that shot was really cool :)
Kirby Weldon Nice catch
Very useful jig and a great make.
Como siempre, tus videos me dejan alucinado!!!
Great jig and great video. Keep it up.
As ever, very educational.
Cooles Projekt, gefällt mir!
Zwei Sachen sind mir ein den Kopf gekommen:
1.) Du hast noch zwei Streifen angeschraubt, da könnte man evtl. auch Metall nehmen, damits besser ins Holz einhackt.
2.) Du meintest, zum Schluss, dass eine Halterung am anderen Ende des Brettes noch gut wäre - neues Projekt.
Kennst Du Firtz und Franz. Vielleicht wäre das Deine Lösung.
Ich muss weg... ich schmelze...Ciao :)
Martin Sprandel Danke! Ja Metall wäre auch gut, aber wollte es möglichst metallfrei machen. Und Fritz und Franz steht schon länger auf meiner To Do Liste.
Ingenius! Did you ever get round to making the toggle clamp for the sliding table T-track? Thoroughly enjoy your work and videos! -Nick
Nice job. Now you should make a clamp for the other end!
Good job, Marius! Loved the outtakes :-)
Tony Lorentzen Thanky Tony!
more outtakes please!
I've never tapped threads into wood before, will they hold up? Thanks for sharing and I am so jealous of your table saw. :D
Michael M Yes, in hardwood the hold up REALLY well. I made clamps with wood threads, so...
Marius Hornberger Awesome and thanks, I honestly did not know that. Good to know!
Well done again - but was it really worth saving 25€ ? The "Besäumschuh" is a rather cheap accessory
building stuff by yourself is always cooler than buying something
Of Course but there is always a point where it stops making sense - you could also not only build your own saw, forge your own blades, wire up your own engine ..
+Powermaennchen thats true but building your own blades is another level and this is quite easy to build so why should you not build it
Sinuchs i guess it just pretends on the amount of spare time to invest into woodworking, he sure did a fine job but the original part is cheap and he could have been making something else in that time, that's all i say - i always like when woodworkers are also "inventors" coming up with their own stuff but in that case me personally would rather spend the money and continue with somehting more exciting
you also use clamping system on sliding table
Bravo marius
fitz und franz!
Very nice !
Wouldn't it have been easier to modify a G clamp (or similar clamp) to fit into the T slot on the sliding table, you could then use it for any similar jobs.
Sympatická pomôcka.
I'm confused about what it does. It just looks like a stop block. I guess the angle holds the piece down on the sliding table?
Right, that's what it does.
Gut dass die Klebestifte nicht nur bei mir so aussehen (Outtakes) :-)
Schreinerpower Die haben wohl doch ein Haltbarkeitsdatum...
I'd slot & use splines instead of dowels.
How come?
David Taylor - I thought a hardwood spline along the length of the joint would be easier/quicker than rigging up for the drilling procedure, but after watching a second time I'd just use a much thicker (35-50mm) rear piece cut at 45° to mate with the black piece; glue would probably be strong enough on that broad surface (wood to wood w/o that laminate), but tablesaw kerf splines along left and right edge could easily be added (and then the rear piece could be thinner with that extra support). Marius' work is always beautiful though. Such a witty, brilliant young man.
The rounding of the knob the way you did it, is not something I would recommend.
For the rest im impressed by the ingenuity of you projets.
Thanks for sharing.
Hello, if you please can you tell me what program you use to make your templates with your computer. thank you very much.
Hola, si eres tan amable me puedes decir que programa utilizas para hacer tus plantillas con el ordenador. muchas gracias.
Vicentin Llopis "SketchUp". But I put some knob templates for download in the description of this video:ruclips.net/video/RRdr16loUSg/видео.html
Marius Hornberger Muchas gracias. Te sigo en tus videos, son formidables.
Saludos desde España.
Thank you very much. I'll follow in your videos, they are formidable.
Greetings from Spain.
Your very clever :-)
Greetings
Erik
Marius, you are super-skilled and really smart - but please, use a push-stick and don't put your hands as close to the sawblade as you do.
The table saw is extremely useful, but it will eat your hand (or worse) in just a few milliseconds.. And it's enough with one moment of lost focus to make an accident happen.
RUclipsr gosforth Handyman has some recent videos on tablesaw safety, please watch them.
und warum klemmst du die Bohle nicht einfach mit zwei kleinen Schraubzwingen (zBsp den Festoolzwingen von der Führungsschiene) in der T-Nut fest ?
weil ich diese Zwingen nicht habe
Marius,
I t seems your miter slot is tighter right near the end. I have the same issue on my grizzly. Why is that? Is it done on purpose?
Any help from anyone would be appreciated. Thank you.
Rich
No, my miter slot is the same from start to end.
I would have preferred to make this comment as a "reply" to Eugene or Duio, but neither has their RUclips "reply" option turned on. Both are troubled at 2:55 with the router round over on such a small piece with your hands so close to that whirling cutter. I supposed I would have just used a small file and finished up with a small diameter spindle sander to make the round over. I wonder if either Eugene or Duio would prefer some other method? Did you feel uncomfortable with your fingers so close to router cutter? In hindsight, would you use a different method to soften the edges of the knob?
***** I included this shot on purpose to see how many people will indicate me about my safety. I really don't feel uncomfortable doing this, because I know what I'm doing, where my fingers have to be and where not and I am fully concentrated on that. The time-lapse makes it look a little bit unsafe. But this is about the smallest piece that I would round over like this.
Marius Hornberger Excellent response, Marius. Thanks. : D
You really need to get yourself fritz und franz
What blade are you using for solid wood?
+Bid Budy A ripping blade with 14 teeth (flat top)
+Marius Hornberger Wow that's a aggressive blade! Do you also use it for cross cut?
Thanks
no, of course not.
+Marius Hornberger What blade do you use for cross cut, are all of your blade from Felder?
Thanks
+Bid Budy Watch my Q&A. There I showed what I'm using.
Why i dont have one why ?
a metal custom made 'll be fine
edging shoe, the literal translation of besäumschuh.
This makes you the first hit in Google. But what is it actually called?
I suspect a lot of the terminology doesn't really exist in english because this type of saw isn't very popular outside of Europe.
I still sort of disagree with calling this type of saw a "Sliding Table Saw". While it obviously has a sliding table it is still not comparable to saws that have a sliding table as an accessory, here it is an integral part.
Panel Saw seems to be somewhat popular but they are more appropriate for really huge machines making furniture from particleboard. The manufacturer Altendorf does use the term "Format Saw" on its US homepage, but that is like the edging shoe just a literal translation of the German word. The thing is, those machines have been developed to get around the problem of needing reference surfaces. Normal sliding table saws can only do that if the workpiece is huge.
+BR H Besäumschuh is the correct term, google was right :-)
safety... 2:55
nice project, but NO 2:56 !!!!!
I yelped too, Dominique. So, the advantage of hindsight, I would layout, drill the hole while I had the larger work-piece to grip, scroll cut and sand, and then i suppose I would try to temporarily fasten the work-piece to a handle; through the hole, I guess. Maybe some hot melt glue, too, because easily removable. Maybe all that would not be any more convenient than grabbing the work-piece with a handscrew, though, no matter how many shiftings. Only one piece.
By the way, Marius, you are the Boss with Hot Sauce! Lee
You've got too much time into it,
should have bought the dam thing
from hammer for $100 bucks.lol
Are you Married?