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Thread: 2 table saws in the shop-how do you have them arranged?

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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Nov 2008
    Location
    Saugus, Kelpafornia
    Posts
    607
    I put a 52" Biesemeyer fence on my old Craftsman 100 TS to replace the O-riginal POS fence.
    Before a got aroundtoit side table made for it, and the umpteenth time I got poked in the guts trying to round the corner of one of those rails, I was standing there rubbing my belly and finally a thought occurred.
    Off came my ever present 16' tape and I measured between the rails, 27".
    I walked over to a decrepit Delta TS I had been given and measured acrossed its table, 27".
    So I dragged the poor abused Delta into the shop and began fitting it up to the rails.
    The right wing of the 100 fitted right up to the Delta, BTW.
    Here is the end result of two table saws married to one fence system:
    Attached Images Attached Images

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Dec 2003
    Location
    West of Ft. Worth, TX
    Posts
    5,815
    That is cool, Sonny! But I don't have the room to do it that way...wish I did. My main shop in the diagram is 20 wide by 24 deep. The side room is 14 X 12. I'm trying to keep it for an assembly/finishing room.
    Thanks for the pictures. Jim.
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  3. #3
    I have them back to back. My slider being feed from the door and my rip/dado saw in back a 12" table between attaches the two of them I made it from melamine so it take wax well.good luck

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Location
    Upland CA
    Posts
    5,580
    Jim,

    As Jim K., says, back to back will not work for a commercial shop where more than one saw may be needed. As I remember, you are alone in your workshop, so it wouldn't matter. It worked well for me.

    One of my saws is a Felder slider, and it slid right past the Unisaw when they were back to back. Since moving I have cut down the Unisaw fence to 30", since I don't need anything larger. I imagine that one of your saws could be shortened also. I keep a rip blade in the Unisaw, and use it for dado's also. Most crosscuts are done on the RAS, and sheet goods on the slider.

    I have had three different sliders on the Unisaw, and use them for dadoing cabinet sides. My current one is the Jessem, and it will dado a standard 24" wide lower cabinet side. (Thinking of putting the Excalibur back on though)

    In the 30" table on the Unisaw is an old router with a 1/4" roundover bit in it, which I use fairly often.

    Long winded, I know, but I hope it is of some help. I would suggest you try back to back.

    Rick Potter

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Nov 2008
    Location
    Saugus, Kelpafornia
    Posts
    607
    Back to back never occurred to me. But it sounds like a good idea for some shops.
    Of course when you are standing there half doubled over because your long fence rails just poked you in the belly again , the focus was on filling the hole.
    The 100 remained the rip saw and long stock saw. The Delta handled the cross cuts and even split a bunch of used brick for facing on the slab foundation between the house and the driveway. (I used a dry type diamond blade for that.)
    It never quite recovered from sawing bricks.

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