03-01-2020, 10:21 PM
(This post was last modified: 03-01-2020, 10:23 PM by Robin Dobbie.)
I've had good luck with my Kreg 30" miter bars. I set them up and they seem to stay adjusted fairly well. I can go out to the shop when it's 40ish and get some work done, or wait until it's 100. In either case, the sleds aren't impossible to use in one extreme or the other.
I wanted to make a new crosscut sled that has 36" of cut capacity, so I tried the Rockler 36-inch miter bars. They're unusable as-is. The set screws are loose, making them pointless, and there aren't even as many on their 36-inch bars as the Kreg put on their 30-inch bars. I noticed the threads are much coarser than the Kreg set screws. I really enjoy the adjustability of the Kreg bars, and I find that even with their very fine TPI set screws(probably 32 TPI), the smallest turn can be the difference between slop and too much resistance.
I thought I'd look for some set screws like come with the Kreg bars. I found some nylon 6/6 set screws on Amazoozoo for $3. They're white/transparent, the Kreg ones are black. Not sure if that alone is any indication. Looking at the thermal stability of nylon 6/6, it appears that it gains or loses .001" per inch per 10 degrees. I feel like that's kind of a lot. I looked at Kreg's miter bar description, and they say the set screws are nylon, don't specify a type. Maybe I got that thermal expansion wrong, I'm terrible at math.
Then again, maybe I should try and fix the included set screws and just hope for the best. My first thought for making them tighter was maybe take a cigarette lighter to a paper clip and try to mess up of one of the threads a little bit by melting one of the last threads to engage. My second thought is taking some sticky ant/bug guard and dabbing some on the threads. If that doesn't work, I can at least clean it off.
I really want a sliding table saw, I tell you hwhat.
I wanted to make a new crosscut sled that has 36" of cut capacity, so I tried the Rockler 36-inch miter bars. They're unusable as-is. The set screws are loose, making them pointless, and there aren't even as many on their 36-inch bars as the Kreg put on their 30-inch bars. I noticed the threads are much coarser than the Kreg set screws. I really enjoy the adjustability of the Kreg bars, and I find that even with their very fine TPI set screws(probably 32 TPI), the smallest turn can be the difference between slop and too much resistance.
I thought I'd look for some set screws like come with the Kreg bars. I found some nylon 6/6 set screws on Amazoozoo for $3. They're white/transparent, the Kreg ones are black. Not sure if that alone is any indication. Looking at the thermal stability of nylon 6/6, it appears that it gains or loses .001" per inch per 10 degrees. I feel like that's kind of a lot. I looked at Kreg's miter bar description, and they say the set screws are nylon, don't specify a type. Maybe I got that thermal expansion wrong, I'm terrible at math.
Then again, maybe I should try and fix the included set screws and just hope for the best. My first thought for making them tighter was maybe take a cigarette lighter to a paper clip and try to mess up of one of the threads a little bit by melting one of the last threads to engage. My second thought is taking some sticky ant/bug guard and dabbing some on the threads. If that doesn't work, I can at least clean it off.
I really want a sliding table saw, I tell you hwhat.