lbhsbz
Well-known member
I decided to upgrade from my 12 year old Ryobi table saw a few weeks ago and ended up with what I believe to be an Emerson built Craftsman 10" saw with cast iron wingplates. Got it for what I thought was a decent price...$150, but it had no fence. The guy had an incra jig on it that he moved to his new cabinet saw. He was the original owner, and had some nice work to show off...so I figure I was getting something pretty decent.
I was gonna build a fence...lots of plans out there, but then found a Delta T-3 brand new on craigslist for $95, so I scooped that up. Followed the instructions for installation, and ended up with a completely unusable hunk of ****.
I also do plenty of metal machine work and fabrication...so precision is sort of important to me.
I couldn't get the fence either (a) straight or (b) to clamp tight enough. I decided to check the table because I didn't have anything else to do at that point, and when I hit this point I usually resort to starting from scratch, and make everything as right as it can be. Table is about .020-.030" low near the blade...high everywhere else. After screwing around with emery cloth glued to big chunks of metal for a few hours and getting nowhere, out came the inline sander, and then the belt sander. Its flat within .010" now, which is good enough for the time being...a week later. The fence is still a *************. I started looking online for others who have had issues with this fence and found a few guys looking for some source on discontinued plastic "rub blocks". Well, I didn't have any of those on my fence. Dug around in the trash and found one stuck in a piece of styrofoam in the box it came in (sealed when I got it)...but the other one was MIA. I measured it up and found another sort of suitable piece of material to make one out of...yellow lid from a home depot storage crate on Sunday night. Got ahold of Delta yesterday and they have a new part number that's still sort of available if you look in the right place...$1.35 each. I need one. $17 shipping once I get halfway through check out. It's 1/4 the size of a stick of gum. **** that, we'll keep the yellow storage lid rub block.
Got everything back up and bolted on and the fence seems to square up nicely and work OK. Fired up the saw to make a few test cuts and after 2 or 3, it sounds like it's ready to come apart. Belt looks a bit chewed up and old, but nowhere near as ****** as belts on my other stuff that are nice and quiet still. As I was playing with it I heard a bang...looked underneath and the pulley had just fallen off of the spindle. Spindle is a bit fuckered, but not bad enough to do anything about it...smacked the pulley back on, tightened the set screw, hit the switch and it sounds like a belt driven table saw again. 4 foot rip test cut is out less than 1/32 from one end to the other, so a bit more fine tuning, but it's beginning to look promising.
The alternative was buying a new one complete and working for...probably $400 or so. I'm probably 10 hours into ******* with this stupid thing.
No, I'll never learn.
I was gonna build a fence...lots of plans out there, but then found a Delta T-3 brand new on craigslist for $95, so I scooped that up. Followed the instructions for installation, and ended up with a completely unusable hunk of ****.
I also do plenty of metal machine work and fabrication...so precision is sort of important to me.
I couldn't get the fence either (a) straight or (b) to clamp tight enough. I decided to check the table because I didn't have anything else to do at that point, and when I hit this point I usually resort to starting from scratch, and make everything as right as it can be. Table is about .020-.030" low near the blade...high everywhere else. After screwing around with emery cloth glued to big chunks of metal for a few hours and getting nowhere, out came the inline sander, and then the belt sander. Its flat within .010" now, which is good enough for the time being...a week later. The fence is still a *************. I started looking online for others who have had issues with this fence and found a few guys looking for some source on discontinued plastic "rub blocks". Well, I didn't have any of those on my fence. Dug around in the trash and found one stuck in a piece of styrofoam in the box it came in (sealed when I got it)...but the other one was MIA. I measured it up and found another sort of suitable piece of material to make one out of...yellow lid from a home depot storage crate on Sunday night. Got ahold of Delta yesterday and they have a new part number that's still sort of available if you look in the right place...$1.35 each. I need one. $17 shipping once I get halfway through check out. It's 1/4 the size of a stick of gum. **** that, we'll keep the yellow storage lid rub block.
Got everything back up and bolted on and the fence seems to square up nicely and work OK. Fired up the saw to make a few test cuts and after 2 or 3, it sounds like it's ready to come apart. Belt looks a bit chewed up and old, but nowhere near as ****** as belts on my other stuff that are nice and quiet still. As I was playing with it I heard a bang...looked underneath and the pulley had just fallen off of the spindle. Spindle is a bit fuckered, but not bad enough to do anything about it...smacked the pulley back on, tightened the set screw, hit the switch and it sounds like a belt driven table saw again. 4 foot rip test cut is out less than 1/32 from one end to the other, so a bit more fine tuning, but it's beginning to look promising.
The alternative was buying a new one complete and working for...probably $400 or so. I'm probably 10 hours into ******* with this stupid thing.
No, I'll never learn.