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Table Saw Basics

Welcome to Table Saw Basics -- a one hour course on using a table saw accurately and safely -- a good starting point for table saw beginners, some interesting jigs for experienced woodworkers.

The series of videos that are listed on the left were deemed by Popular Woodworking to be the most complete video on the subject in its day -- and table saws haven't changed much since then.   We have fancier guides and guards available today but essentially it is the same machine.

Oh yes I look much younger in these videos than most of you remember.  This course was recorded a long time ago just as I was transitioning from a shop bound cabinet maker to the Home Improvement problem solver that you have known for over 30 years on TV and the web. This course was originally produced as a one hour video course.  Here for the web I have broken it up into very small clips -- allowing you to use the video list on the left to follow through the whole course, or jump directly to the part you want to see.

Some of the jigs shown in this video are now available as store bought items, like the feather boards, but many of these jigs are tools that cabinet makers make for themselves to this day.  Breaking this course up into small video clips allows you to go straight to what you want to watch -- or watch them all in sequence for the full course. 

This course was all done on a large industrial saw, but with the exception of the overhead guard on this machine, there is no real difference between this saw and all the others you can purchase at renovation centres.  Things are explained without dimensions so that you can build all the tools and jigs to fit your particular machine. What may surprise you is to learn that even on table saws there are some basic line-up and adjustments that can make your machine work better -- and the blade is not the starting point for lining things up -- but you'll see that in detail in the videos.

Don't forget that there are blogs at the bottom of each video for you to share your reactions, even improvements on these techniques.  When it becomes warranted I will modify the videos to deal with your suggestions, maybe even include some video from your shop as we all work together to share our own Learning Curves.

 

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Introduction

Learning Curve 93

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Jon on August 07, 2010 23:52

You are right Mike.  Since the basic information is good we are working on modifying the images rather than throwing them out.  Part of the problem was that this was originally produced as a one hour VHS -- where there was a long speech on safety in the front -- things like "guard removed for the camera" and the like. When it got broken up into small segments -- all of that got lost.


But you are right, there is definitely a lack of use of safety glasses.  We are going to grind through each and every segment with technology that we didn't have when this was originally produced -- and work to make the safety message loud and clear. 


There always remains the reality that some cuts with a table saw just cannot have guards, so push sticks and a bit of alertness is required. 


Jon

Mike Post on July 30, 2010 02:54

Jon, where are your safety glasses? The video's have great information, but you are doing some things in the video that make me cringe (safety wise).

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