09-04-2017, 12:30 PM
So the other day I was out in the workshop and was in need of cutting a piece of wood at a 45* angle. I tried to tilt my saw blade and the carriage did not want to move. So I packed it in of the day and said to myself that sometime in the future I would need to investigate why it the carriage was not tilting.
Today was that day. I started tearing apart my Hitachi 10" table saw to get to the spiral cams and trunions the saw blade tilts upon. I had to tip it on its top after pulling the fence guides off. Then the legs came off as well as the dust port. So, now basically I have a intact table saw upside down and still wondering why the blade won't tilt.
Next is a few sprays of rust remover, because I suspected the trunions had rusted while sitting in my shop for a while. That did not work so I scratched my head and wondered why oh why will the saw not tilt.
Then in a eureka moment, I saw on the front of the saw base a nut attached to a long rod which runs back to the trunion housing. Woooooops. I had forgotten that there was a nut which has an arm attached to it that locks the saw tilting in place. I had forgot to release that nut and thus the trunions would not release. CRAP. Sometimes just thinking a process through would be more helpful than jumping into a project.
But on the bright side, I have gotten to tune up my table saw. I sanded the table top, aligned the fence supports, cleaned the interior, and flattened the table top.
So, all in all, a good learning experience and a quick tune up for a good table saw.
Today was that day. I started tearing apart my Hitachi 10" table saw to get to the spiral cams and trunions the saw blade tilts upon. I had to tip it on its top after pulling the fence guides off. Then the legs came off as well as the dust port. So, now basically I have a intact table saw upside down and still wondering why the blade won't tilt.
Next is a few sprays of rust remover, because I suspected the trunions had rusted while sitting in my shop for a while. That did not work so I scratched my head and wondered why oh why will the saw not tilt.
Then in a eureka moment, I saw on the front of the saw base a nut attached to a long rod which runs back to the trunion housing. Woooooops. I had forgotten that there was a nut which has an arm attached to it that locks the saw tilting in place. I had forgot to release that nut and thus the trunions would not release. CRAP. Sometimes just thinking a process through would be more helpful than jumping into a project.
But on the bright side, I have gotten to tune up my table saw. I sanded the table top, aligned the fence supports, cleaned the interior, and flattened the table top.
So, all in all, a good learning experience and a quick tune up for a good table saw.