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Woodworking (rec.woodworking) Discussion forum covering all aspects of working with wood. All levels of expertise are encouraged to particiapte. |
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Folks,
Need some advice here. First, a disclaimer. I hereby acknowledge that the best solution is to replace the item in question with a new (or used) PM/Jet/Grizzly/Delta/whatever. Not an option. So rest your itchy trigger fingers, and save the bandwidth. On to the problem. I have a Craftsman tablesaw (NO, I cannot replace it). The top is "dished" towards the center. The lowest spot seems to be just ahead of the throat--it's about 0.04" lower than the sides. In his book, "Mastering Woodworking Machines," Mark Duginske mentions filling low spots with epoxy paint. I've also thought of filling with some kind of auto-body filler. So my questions--is this enough of a flaw to be worth correcting for a properly tuned saw? Otherwise, it's in excellent shape--arbor runout 0.002, miter gauges parallel to each other to within 0.001, blade dead-parallel to miter gauges. On the other hand, how can I get the blade perpendicular to the top when the top's not flat? And has anybody done this, and what material would you suggest? I'm thinking of building a "dike" around the throat and miter slots, then flooding the top with something that'll self-level, letting it harden, then gluing sandpaper to a sheet of glass and sanding the top flat. Comments? |
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