I keep hearing this and will never believe it.
Limitations:
* small pieces, that I can cut well with my sliding crosscut table
* cuts along a narrow edge such as edge/end-grain splines, tenons, rabbets, resawing, tapered legs
* Cuts along a mitered edge -- keyed miters, splined miters
* Any time you have to measure, mark and move gives you a chance to make an error. With a fence or stop block, you can make repeatable cuts all day long - measure once, cut many. Same for things like angled cuts. A well-tuned fixture or miter gauge can cut miters repeatably. Tenon shoulders that align.
* odd-shaped pieces such as molded profiles that need miters, bevels, scarf joint, or even straight cuts
* Joinery like box joints, machine cut dovetails, compound miters such as crown molding.
* Specialty cuts like cove cutting.
* Dadoes
* Bevel at any angle I wish, even more than 45 degrees such as raised panels & beveled edge table tops
While you might do some of these on a router table, it means having the right bit and swapping it, measuring distance to a fence, & running a sample piece. With a table saw you can just set to the scale and know it's accurate.
Maybe
you can do everything that you do; I can't
JR1 said:
I have the TS55 and the MFT table for it. Except for ocassional single cuts (hand saw) I use it for everything. I also have a jigsaw that fits the rails as well. With a router or router table and the track saw you can do everything that a table saw can do and a whole lot more. The only limitation on size is your ability to mark the material accurately and the amount of track that you have.