Bill, Yes I mean 5* to the left and 5* to the right. So a total of 10*. How do you record the drift of a blade? Some type of protractor against the fence? Or offset of the fence relative to the edge of the table from front to back? And I guess if the tracking changes at all the drift will change as well?
Thanks!
Salem
As several others have pointed out, the first step is to make sure your BS is properly tuned, you're using a good quality blade (usually not the one that came with your BS), and you have the blade properly tensioned. With that done, now you can track the drift for that particular blade.
Start with a fairly long, narrow piece of wood, say 10-15" long by 2-4" wide. If you cut primarily hardwoods, then use a piece of scrap hardwood for this test. Make sure at least one long side of the board is perfectly straight. Now mark a line down the center of the board lengthwise, exactly parallel to the straight edge. Without using the fence, begin cutting down the line freehand, making sure you keep the blade right on the line. Stop the cut about half way down the board; hold it, or clamp it, exactly where you stopped cutting; turn off the saw. Now put a protractor along the straight edge of the board and the infeed side of your table. The board is probably going through the blade slightly skewed. The amount of that skew is the "drift" of the blade. Usually it's only a few degrees. If it's more than the 5* you're allowing for, then you might need to re-tune your saw or get a better blade. I usually find mine in the 1-3* range, and that's with run-of-the-mill blades. Once you know the amount of drift, you can adjust your fence for it.
As someone else pointed out, they use a vertical dowel attached to the fence and guide the work through freehand when resawing. For resawing thicker pieces, this is actually the recommended way to do it. Using a fence for resawing is usually only recommended when cutting thin pieces, like veneer.
I hope this helps. If my description doesn't make sense let me know and I'll try to scan an article in one of the ww magazines and send it to you.
Bill