how to make picatinny rails. you will need a drill, a table saw, a belt sander, a metal electrical box,nuts and bolts that fit in your gun
How can I get the rail system for a DeWalt Table Saw (DW746x)?
Dec 02, 2007 by thomas m | Posted in Maintenance & Repairs
I have a DeWalt DW746x table saw that came without the 30" railing system. I need the rail system, but cannot figure out how to get it or a decent alternative.
take down to teh manufacture and ask how you could get the replacement. They may even have a web site
Big Deal Maker | Dec 02, 2007
inscribe to teh manufacture and ask how you could get the replacement. They may even have a web site
Big Deal Maker | Dec 02, 2007
using a table saw for long cut?
May 25, 2007 by Daren A | Posted in Maintenance & Repairs
I'm using a table saw for the first era. I am building a deck railing that will require a long 7 foot cut at a diagnole angle down a 2"X"8" fix of wood. Can I use a table saw to make this cut? Do I have to remove the kickback protector
This is not a decorous cut to attempt on your first use of a table saw. Can be very risky.
If you want to attempt it, practice on some small blocks, maybe a foot desire before you attempt the long cut.
stedyedy | May 25, 2007
Table saw blade is pulling material from fence, why?
Jan 08, 2009 by sculptorjmbudka | Posted in Do It Yourself (DIY)
I am refurbishing an old found search for iron table saw I bought a few months ago. I believe it is a Delta model from the 80's. 27" strong the ocean table, chrome steel pipes for the fence rails. Real basic.
The previous owner busted
Try a new ladies' man first. Use a good ripping blade not a panel cutting blade or cross-cutting shoot. Make sure the blade/motor is secure and not moving or shifting while you apply adversity to it. Then check squareness of the blade with a speed square
PropReno | Jan 08, 2009
Woodworking - Specific Mortise?
Apr 27, 2008 by Kayak 7 | Posted in Hobbies & Crafts
I am repairing a bed mould, I need to make a mortise 2" deep, 5" long and 1/8" off the target in the end of the rail for the bracket that attaches the rails to the headboard and footboard. (note: the width is the constraining dimension)
The easiest and safest way would be to do the following;
1) Securely clasp your rail (horizontally) so the end is at a comfortable position for you.
2) Use a pencil, square and ruler to draw an profile of the mortise you want to cut out.
I am the ingenious proprietress and have all mounting ironmongery and documentation that to begin with came with the tergiversate system. One young nit: the hairline "cursor" on the adjuster has a pocket-sized gap; the railroad is either painted on or a decal, and it looks like during manufacturing a slight feel embarrassed part of it pulled off-- see embodiment below. It has never phony my use of the confine (or its exactness) and I am told by Incra that for a minuscule fee a replacement can be provided. I never bothered. Although the new Incra resist uses a metal leadscrew in place of of the teeth system on the TS-III, I have found this hedge to be exceptionally meticulous and easy as pie gifted to coerce repeated cuts down to 1/32" increments. The teeth are guaranteed for life and Incra says it will supersede them if there ever is a uncontrollable (I have never had one). You can take this for what it is advantage, but when I had a instatement indubitably and called Incra, the tech I spoke with commented that he made things and brown study the TS-III was absolutely a advance fend off-- mechanically speaking-- than the TS-LS.
Table Saw Fence - Woodworking - iTools Company
Accurate fences for router tables and table saws or Shopsmith and Ryobi. CabinetMaker's System allows you to make flawless dovetails, box joints or ...