02-25-2012, 04:42 PM
1. Unplug your saw. Make sure the blade is set to 0 degrees. (vertical)
2. Cut a sharp angle on a piece of scrap with your miter saw, and mount it to your miter gauge:
3. Raise the saw blade to about 3", mark one tooth of your blade with a Sharpie, and just touch the point to that tooth at the leading edge of the blade.
4. Rotate the blade so that the marked tooth is now at the trailing edge.
Slide your miter gauge to the same tooth, and see if it just touches, like it did before.
5. If all is well, your blade is perfectly square.
6. Now, check that your fence is perfectly parallel to you miter gauge slot.
Set it right at the edge of the slot, lock the fence, and feel the leading and trailing edges with your finger.
Personally, I like to have my trailing edge about 10 thousandths offset (away from the blade) (10 thousandths is just about the thickness of 1 playing card)
2. Cut a sharp angle on a piece of scrap with your miter saw, and mount it to your miter gauge:
3. Raise the saw blade to about 3", mark one tooth of your blade with a Sharpie, and just touch the point to that tooth at the leading edge of the blade.
4. Rotate the blade so that the marked tooth is now at the trailing edge.
Slide your miter gauge to the same tooth, and see if it just touches, like it did before.
5. If all is well, your blade is perfectly square.
6. Now, check that your fence is perfectly parallel to you miter gauge slot.
Set it right at the edge of the slot, lock the fence, and feel the leading and trailing edges with your finger.
Personally, I like to have my trailing edge about 10 thousandths offset (away from the blade) (10 thousandths is just about the thickness of 1 playing card)