Jswain
Well-known member
The best thing you could do with a table saw is spend a few nights on google/youtube and look at all the jigs/aux. fences/featherboards/outfeed tables etc. that other people have made for them. Copy the ones you like and set it up proper from the get go without rushing into any other projects...it will make all the projects you use it for turn out twice as nice anyways.
Bare minimum I wouldn't be using mine without a large out feed table, a tall aux. fence, MANY different style push sticks/hold downs. Take the time and make it nice, a fence with a T-slot and you can hook a feather board in a few inches before the blade then your hand doesn't have to come anywhere near the blade. A feather board in the mitre slot keeps the material against the fence so your hand never has to come near the blade. All that leaves you with is feeding the material and with a good push stick(in many shapes/sizes) your hand never has to come near the blade. A large out feed table and you never have to worry about catching material from falling off the back. A homemade zero clearance insert and you don't have to worry about anything jamming down in the blade.
If you are going to be doing a lot of mitre cuts build a mitre cutting sled, doing a lot of crosscuts build a crosscutting sled. Once you build all these jigs then your hands aren't even close to the blade, and as long as your fence/trunions are set up parallel the chance of your workplace jamming or kicking back are reduced very much so. Combine that with a good riving knife and your guard and it will make your table saw experience much more enjoyable.
Bare minimum I wouldn't be using mine without a large out feed table, a tall aux. fence, MANY different style push sticks/hold downs. Take the time and make it nice, a fence with a T-slot and you can hook a feather board in a few inches before the blade then your hand doesn't have to come anywhere near the blade. A feather board in the mitre slot keeps the material against the fence so your hand never has to come near the blade. All that leaves you with is feeding the material and with a good push stick(in many shapes/sizes) your hand never has to come near the blade. A large out feed table and you never have to worry about catching material from falling off the back. A homemade zero clearance insert and you don't have to worry about anything jamming down in the blade.
If you are going to be doing a lot of mitre cuts build a mitre cutting sled, doing a lot of crosscuts build a crosscutting sled. Once you build all these jigs then your hands aren't even close to the blade, and as long as your fence/trunions are set up parallel the chance of your workplace jamming or kicking back are reduced very much so. Combine that with a good riving knife and your guard and it will make your table saw experience much more enjoyable.


