WoodShop Basic Table Saw Class

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Safety

  • Think through the cut every time.
    • Failure to do so is the #1 cause of injuries among properly trained users.
    • Can you reach the kill switch with your knee?
    • Where are your hands?
    • Where is the blade?
    • Where will the material go when the cut completes?
  • Blade guard pros & cons.
  • Move smoothly through the cut.
  • Stop if things sound or look wrong.
  • Hit the kill switch with your knee if anything seems unsafe.
  • Wood and saws are cheap compared to fingers.

Saw Maintenance

  • Verify the blade is parallel to the miter slots.
    • Is this done using shims or other?
  • Verify the rip fence is parallel to the miter slots.
    • Adjust squareness.
  • does the miter gauge have stops? Verify stops are true to their angle.
    • Adjust stops.

Setup & Teardown

Setup

  • Use outdoors only.
  • Do not leave unattended (theft risk).
    • Plan accordingly, use bathroom, bring what you need.
    • Bring a dust brush.
  • Roll gently over bumps, be aware of feet.
  • Use an appropriate extension cord (or plug in directly).
  • Open the stand.

Teardown

  • Brush off the sawdust.
  • Stow the miter gauge and push stick.
  • Wrap the power cord.
  • Wrap the extension cord.
  • Close the stand.
  • Roll gently over bumps, be aware of feet.
  • Vacuum out the sawdust.

Project

Final Product

13.5" x 7.5" x 3" box with bottom

Cut List

  • 1/2" OSB
    • 2@ 7.5" x 3" with 45 degree bevels, rough side in, and a .14 x .14 dado .125 from the bottom edge
    • 2@ 13.5" x 3" with 45 degree bevels, rough side in, and a .14 x .14 dado .125 from the bottom edge
  • 1/8" hardboard
    • 1@ 6.75" x 12.75"

Ripping

  • Material max size 2' x 4'.
  • Set the blade 90 degrees to the table.
  • Set the width of cut.
  • Set the depth of cut.
  • Install blade guard.
  • Put the push stick where you can reach it.
  • Think through the cut every time.
  • Start the saw.
  • Keep the material square to the fence and flat on the table.
  • Move the material through the blade steadily, listening and watching for changes.
  • When the cut completes, hit the kill switch.

Dadoing

Crosscutting

Beveling

Mitering

I haven't figured out how to shoehorn a miter cut into this project, but we'll do one anyway, so you know how to use the miter gauge.