I’m fairly new here and can only speak for myself, but doubt anyone here wants that. From what I’ve seen sharing knowledge and expertise is a given here. FWIW, I don’t normally check for prior posts either, and just thought you may be interested in the earlier discussion.You'd think after fifty years of woodworking I'd have learned to keep my opinions to myself, Sorry.
I don't know why you would say that?I’m fairly new here and can only speak for myself, but doubt anyone here wants that. From what I’ve seen sharing knowledge and expertise is a given here. FWIW, I don’t normally check for prior posts either, and just thought you may be interested in the earlier discussion.
Sorry.DrBob - I was referring only to the sentence I quoted.
As far as the table saw sanding disc goes, I have one and found it handy to deal with odd sanding situations, though others here don't advocate using them. Mine is just a flat plate - the tapered disk shown in the video Tony mentions is a nifty solution to many situations, though personally, I'd be more inclined to use a jointer and if necessary, a sanding block.
The remark was not directed at you. Or the following, just venting. Just a general observation from past experiences on woodworking forums.I’m fairly new here and can only speak for myself, but doubt anyone here wants that. From what I’ve seen sharing knowledge and expertise is a given here. FWIW, I don’t normally check for prior posts either, and just thought you may be interested in the earlier discussion.
Move the fence to the left side of the blade.Be aware if you have a left tilt saw, you have to change the set for 90 so it tilts to the right.
Yes. but will work by not for panels wider than your fence capability, if that’s a need.Move the fence to the left side of the blade.