Once verified the levels for accuracy, then cover the top of the TS with
some MDF (cover the whole top) and make sure the TS is level in all
directions. Then take off the MDF and check individual areas, you will find
out where you have just a section out. Adjust and your done.
wrote in message
...
On Wed, 26 Jan 2005 01:02:55 -0500, Silvan
wrote:
I ran into a curious situation today. I have some trivial but
significant
alignment problem with the left wing of my table saw. I was attempting
to
gauge how far out of whack it is by comparing two levels.
For the first level, one of those orange deals with three vials in it. I
used this to level the saw initially. It reports the saw as being level
all the way around. If I move it out to the waffle wing in question, and
position it appropriately, it also reports the wing as being level all
the
way around. Whatever difference there might be is too small to gauge
with
this method.
So I thought I'd look at two levels simultaneously. I grabbed the head
off
an old combination square, that I use for sundry low quality purposes.
Put
it on the table, and it showed a huge amount of tilt. Put it on the
wing,
and it showed the same huge amount of tilt.
Then I got the head off my good combo square, and it showed the same as
the
first one. Grossly out of whack level wise.
I just don't get it. Why would one show perfect and the other show that
the
left side of the saw is almost 1/4" higher than the right? That's a huge
difference. My first thought is length. The orange 3-in-1 level is
about
3/4" longer than the head of a combo square. My second thought is the
size
of the bubble. The bubbles in the combo squares are a bit larger, and
the
vials are a bit larger too.
Just for kicks, I also tried with a bullseye level. It shows level all
the
way around too.
Weird. No, there's nothing stuck to either of the square heads, no
hardware
protruding; no reason I can discern why both of them show such a huge
difference from the other two levels.
sounds to me like you have some bad levels.
first, check the levels against themselves. put a couple of drywall
screws in something immoveable, like the floor. twiddle the heads in
and out while checking with a level until you get it level, then turn
the level end for end and check it again.
some levels can be adjusted, some can't. the ones that can't, and are
out, throw away. if they are also something else useful, like a square
head that *is* square, mark the level as bad.
|