Crosscut sled for Table saw.

UKworkshop.co.uk

Help Support UKworkshop.co.uk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

syntec4

Established Member
Joined
25 Nov 2005
Messages
412
Reaction score
0
Location
Manchester
I own a pretty cheap and nasty Performance Power table saw. :(
2005_1207_123530_JPG.jpg



It is quite powerful and does most things I need it for, apart from cross cutting. The Mitre fence that is supplied with it is terrible. You simply cannot make a square cut with it. It wobbles around so much, it can make a huge difference to the cut. So I decide that I should try to fix it.

I made a cross cut sled out of MDF etc and you can have a look here to read about it.

http://homepage.ntlworld.com/lee_harrison944/Table saw Slide/index.htm

let me know what you think :wink:
I can now cross cut dead square upto 2' stock which is plenty for anything i might be doing. It looks pretty basic and it is. but it improves the performance of the saw no end. It was almost unusable before. I think I spent about £7 all in.
I'll start saving up for something decent after I get my new bandsaw, and planes, chisels...............

2005_1207_150826_JPG.jpg


Cheers.
Lee.
 
Ceertainly seems to work,so well done! Good step-by-step explanation,and as you said - excellent value :)

Andrew
 
Thats nice work Barry. Well done.

I've been looking at mine again today and trying to figure how I can cut large mitres with it.


Lee.
 
The easiest way to achieve 4 perfect mitres - big or small - is with a simple jig on the table saw. It takes only about 30 minutes to make.
Install the blade you will use to cut mitres, and use it each and every time.

Make a sled from a piece of 1/2" plywood 24" wide, i.e. enough to span the two mitre gauge slots on your TS, and about 18" deep. Include an original corner that you know is dead square.

mitrejig1.jpg


Make 2 hardwood runners that fit SNUGLY in the slots. There are two ways to line up the sled to fasten the runners. I simply used the front edge of the saw table, but if you're worried holding everything in place while you drill and drive screws, check to make sure your fence is dead parallel to the slots, and then slide it out of the way to the right. Lower the blade and centre the plywood on the blade and over the slots on top of the hardwood runners. With the original square corner on the right side directly in front of you, bring the fence up to the piece of plywood and lock it in position. With the plywood pressed against the fence, screw it to the runners. Set the sled aside.

mitrejig2.jpg


Now you need to cut a triangle out of a piece of 3/4 plywood or MDF, that also has an original corner checked for square. (That corner will point to the sawblade.) To cut it, I used another shop-made jig that I set to 45° the triangle out, I used another shop-made jig that I trust, because I set it to 45° with a drafting square. However, you can also get there by cutting a square using the fence - make the sides the same length as the width of the sled - and cut along its diagonal ACCURATELY making sure not to cut through the original corner. That will give you 2 right angle triangles. Check with a drafting square until one of them is dead on.

mitrejig3.jpg


Put the sled back on the saw, and place the 3/4 triangle on it with long side against the front edge of the sled and the original corner facing the saw blade. Mark the point on the sled and set the triangle aside. Raise the blade and push the slider into it, cutting up to the point you just marked

mitrejig4.jpg


Turn the saw off, and replace the triangle. Line it up so that its point is exactly centred on the cut, and its long side is exactly lined up with the edge of the slider. Fasten the triangle onto the slider with about 4 screws, turn the saw on, and cut into the triangle an inch or so.

You now have a dedicated jig that will cut perfect left and right mitres without adjustment every time. Even if your placement of the triangular piece was slightly off, if you cut each pair of boards one on either side as shown in the 3 photos below, each joint will still be perfect.

mitrejig5.jpg


mitrejig6.jpg


mitrejig7.jpg


As a refinement, and since one of the problems with any jig of this type is keeping the work from moving during the cut, it's worth installing a piece of sandpaper on the sled and fence surfaces, and if you really want to be fancy, a lever clamp on either side.

Cheers, Garrett
 
Nice photo's - makes it a lot easier to follow (that "a picture is worth a thousand words" sort of thing... :lol: )

Andrew
 
Back
Top