Genre: eLearning | Language: English | Duration: 9h 55m | Size: 5.36 GB
In addition to discussing various techniques and procedures, Hendrik demonstrates them with painstaking detail, even to the extent of showing you how he stands, which hand is responsible for which task and why.
He shows you why the left thumb has such an important job to do while ripping, what the rest of the hand should be doing and why the right hand should be used underhanded at the trailing end of the board. He even shows you how to transition from hands to pushsticks – when to do it, why to do it and how to make the transition smooth and effortless. This video covers short stock ripping, narrow stock, long pieces and even large sheet goods.
the steps required to fine-tune a table saw for optimum performance, including trunnion-to-mitre-slot alignment
about the phenomenon of shut-down and start-up run-out and how to work around it
the difference between a right tilt and left tilt table saw and what the relevant issues are
how to set your splitter up properly for optimum safety while ripping
the difference between where your blade is positioned and the actual “cut line” it creates
what kick-back is and how to avoid it
about choosing the right blade for the job, and about featherboards, zero-clearance inserts, mitre gauges, push sticks and push pads, roller stands and sacrificial fences
proper ripping technique, including hand and finger placement, body positioning and stance
how to rip super long boards and how to assess whether a board is too short to be ripped safely on this machine
how to rip wide panels and sheet goods
how to rip narrow pieces and why the splitter and guard should not be removed
how to cut repetitive narrow strips using a single-point stop block
how to safely make a bevelled rip cut on a right tilt saw and how to reposition the splitter for optimum safety in a matter of seconds
how to use a dado set to cut both crosscut and rip-style dados and rabbets
how to use a simple shop-made splitter to increase safety when cutting rip-style dados (doing these cuts without splitter protection is just not necessary anymore)
how to build a crosscut sled, including how to make the runners fit the mitre slots perfectly and how to achieve 90 degrees between the front fence and cut line
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