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Thread: rip fence

  1. #1

    rip fence

    How do I adjust the fence on my craftsman 10" benchtop table saw? I make it paralell with the miter gague slot but there is a lot of play. it locks in place fine but when its unlocked it can wobble a lot and I can never find where the paralell mark is.
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  2. #2
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    You don't mention a model but all my Craftsman fences except the Align-a-Rip did this.
    "A hen is only an egg's way of making another egg".


    – Samuel Butler

  3. #3
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    Are you saying that there is a lot of slop in the fence when it is locked down? Or only when it is unlocked?
    Regards,

    Glen

    Woodworking: It's a joinery.

  4. #4
    only when it is unlocked
    arcone inverter W/ scratch start tig setup
    victor oxy-acetylene torch
    Miller XLIX STARS AND STRIPES
    MILLERMATIC 135
    task force abrasive chopsaw
    Craftsman 263 piece mechanics tool set/chest
    Craftsman 10 inch tablesaw
    Delta ShopMaster belt/disk sander

  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by Andrew Melamed
    only when it is unlocked
    If it is secure, stable and parallel with the miter slot when locked down, I would not worry about it.
    Regards,

    Glen

    Woodworking: It's a joinery.

  6. #6
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    Andrew I got rid of my Craftman fence and bought a Vega. The smartest thing that I ever did for my TS.

    DK

  7. #7
    Quote Originally Posted by Glen Blanchard
    If it is secure, stable and parallel with the miter slot when locked down, I would not worry about it.
    thatss the problem, the wobbling makes it imposible to know if your lined up with the miter gague.
    arcone inverter W/ scratch start tig setup
    victor oxy-acetylene torch
    Miller XLIX STARS AND STRIPES
    MILLERMATIC 135
    task force abrasive chopsaw
    Craftsman 263 piece mechanics tool set/chest
    Craftsman 10 inch tablesaw
    Delta ShopMaster belt/disk sander

  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by Andrew Melamed
    thatss the problem, the wobbling makes it imposible to know if your lined up with the miter gague.
    I thought you said that it was stable, without slop when locked down.
    Regards,

    Glen

    Woodworking: It's a joinery.

  9. #9
    Quote Originally Posted by Glen Blanchard
    I thought you said that it was stable, without slop when locked down.
    yes, when it is unlocked it wobbles left and right, so i would lock it down and it wont be exactly paralell with the blade.
    arcone inverter W/ scratch start tig setup
    victor oxy-acetylene torch
    Miller XLIX STARS AND STRIPES
    MILLERMATIC 135
    task force abrasive chopsaw
    Craftsman 263 piece mechanics tool set/chest
    Craftsman 10 inch tablesaw
    Delta ShopMaster belt/disk sander

  10. #10
    I have a Ridgid TS that might have a similar fence. The alignment is governed by the head of the fence. As I adjust the width of the cut, I push the fence towards the front rail, then lock it down.
    Hello, My name is John and I am a toolaholic

  11. #11
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    Andrew - Most fences (if properly tuned) while not necessarily square when unlocked, will square themselves when locked down. If you have tuned your fence and it does not self-square when locked, you have a potentiallly dangerous situation there.
    Regards,

    Glen

    Woodworking: It's a joinery.

  12. #12
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    Andrew...my very first TS was simlar to yours. Unfortuantely, the fence design isn't condusive to remaining consistant. You may very well have to carefully measure each time you set the fence. Or consider one of the Rouseau portable table setups that include a very serviceable tee-square fence that the benchtop saw can just sit in. Once you put the saw in it and lock it down, you have an accurate fence. (That was the route I chose...until I upgraded to a larger, more accurate saw)
    --

    The most expensive tool is the one you buy "cheaply" and often...

  13. #13
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    Quote Originally Posted by Andrew Melamed
    How do I adjust the fence on my craftsman 10" benchtop table saw? I make it paralell with the miter gague slot but there is a lot of play. it locks in place fine but when its unlocked it can wobble a lot and I can never find where the paralell mark is.
    I have a Craftsman 10" table saw that had a terrible fence on it. I could get it to lock down tight then take a tape measure and a 2x4, measure from your miter slot to the fence at the back of the saw then measure from the miter slot to to the fence at the front of the saw. Use the 2x4 to tap the fence until it is square with the miter slot at the distance from the blade edge that you need. The best thing I ever did was put the fence in a garbage can and bought an after market fence.
    David B

  14. #14
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    The after market fence businees grew as a result of cost effective (cheap) fences. I switched to Accusquare fence on my Ridgid saw performance is night & day.

    Greg

  15. #15
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    Hi Andrew,

    I too fought a fence that locked at the front and rear and was not self aligning. Fences that do this correctly align and lock at the front and then lock at the rear as the locking handle is moved through it's arc. A pic or a model number might help but, bear in mind that some fences just don't do that. I had to measure front and rear and from the blade each time I moved the fence. It's a good driving force to nudge you to a new fence or saw ;-)
    Last edited by glenn bradley; 12-11-2006 at 5:43 PM.
    "A hen is only an egg's way of making another egg".


    – Samuel Butler

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