I recently built a new table saw sled. My first was pretty pitiful, and I wanted to make a more versatile sled that could accommodate my miter gauge as well as a number of clamps if necessary. Also wanted a micro-adjustable stop, and a way to easily make adjustments down to a 32nd. I finished the sled a little while back, and then moved on to making other jigs and sleds. Today, I've been working on aligning the fence. I'm using the 5-cut method, which I learned about from this video (which seems to be the original, its apparently 13 years old! I've heard about it on other sled videos but thought this one was far more in depth as to how the method worked.)
A = T-B/4/L*R
A - Adjusment to make to fence (positive, move corner opposite of pivot out, negative move in)
T - Top of fifth cut, thousandths
B - Bottom of fifth cut, thousandths
L - Length of fifth cut, inches (could also be thousandths)
R - Radius of fence from pivot, inches (could also be thousandths, units have to agree with L)
I am pretty sure I am running the calculations correctly. I make the four cuts, just barely trimming along the full length of the four initial edges, then on the fifth cut I cut off about a 1" wide strip. Mark the top, measure top and bottom, run the calculation exactly as described in the video (for reference I wrote it down above), and initially I was off by -0.021 or about 21 thousandths. So I made the necessary adjustment, shifted the corner opposite my pivot into the sled by that amount (using my feeler gauges, exactly as described in the video), and I was pretty confident that the adjustment was correct. The feeler gauge slipped into the gap between the pointed "stop" block and the fence nicely, without friction but without any gap or looseness. However, after making the adjustment, clamping the fence in place, drilling a hole, and driving the screw in....
My next set of 5 cuts resulted in a much worse error of +0.089! I was very careful and meticulous in my process, so I was surprised at such a discrepancy. I decided to check with a square, and according to the square, things did not look that far off, and in fact the error still appeared to be "negative"... Well, I was quite confused by that, and decide to dry another larger construction square. That one showed the opposite, a slight positive error (so now, I suspect that some of my squares, may not in fact actually be truly square...I bought a set of three, small/medium/large, and I am now suspicious that all three might have accuracy issues....and, IIRC they were made in...yup, china.) I checked my larger square against a couple of construction quick squares, which I know are pretty accurate, as well as my largest engineering square (which is still rather small compared to the construction square), and they all seem to agree as far as I can tell.
Ok, so, I'm now off positive 89 thousandths. I redo the math, and double, triple check everything, make sure I'm not too loose or too tight on the feeler. Make the adjustment.
My next five cuts, are now -0.105!!!! Checking with my construction square, seems to agree.
So I did it one more time. Now its +0.0305. It seems the swing, gets worse every time, but I cannot actually account for exactly why...although, I have one suspicion (more in a moment.)
I'm a bit baffled here. I've rewatched the parts of the video with the math about a dozen times now. There are a couple points where he covers the concept and the math, and its around 29 minutes where he actually runs the process on his newly created sled, and I am pretty sure I'm running the math correctly. Also pretty sure my numbers are correct. The length of my fence from the pivot point is 22.85", while the while fence length is a little shy of 24". There is about 3/4" or so offset from the pivot end of the fence where my screw that I'm pivoting around actually is. So the number there seems correct (not that it matters that much, a tenth of an inch up or down and it doesn't affect the final result enough to matter, as its in the 1-thou or less range.) I've checked my feeler gauges against my calipers in thousandths, and they agree. The last time I made the fifth cut, I measured about five times each. I zeroed the calipers after each measurement after making sure I'd fully, fully closed them. So I am pretty sure my measurements are within a thousandth. The numbers from my last run are:
R = 22.85
L = 17.3125
T = 0.540 (measure at top of cut 5 strip)
B = 0.446 (measure at bottom of cut 5 strip)
D = 0.094 (subtract; T-B)
C = 0.0235 (divide; D/4)
E = 0.00136 (divide by L; this is my actual error)
A = 0.0305 (multiply by R; this is the error transformed from the cut 5 test strip to the fence)
So I'm now in need of another positive adjustment, by 30 thousandths. I'm afraid to drill another hole in my fence, here, until I know for sure what's going on. Unless someone can show me an error in the math here, the only other thing I can think of, is the drilling process, or the process of screwing in the screw into the new hole, is somehow causing a shift? I tried to drill a countersink into the first couple of holes, but, with this wood and my bit, I'm not getting a perfectly round countersink, its more polygonal. I am wondering if that might be causing problems, but, I also tried to just screw it in without a countersink, letting the impact driver sink it for me. I had errors in either case.... Is that the problem? Is screwing in the screw, or maybe drilling the hole, or something, causing a shift in the fence? Outside of that, I honestly am not sure what else could be causing the problem... Based on the discrepancy in the T vs. B values of the last 5th cut, its clearly not good enough, and will result in not totally square cuts. I think I read or heard in a video, that 5 thousandths or less is good enough, but I'm 6x that.
Anyway...if anyone has any insights, I'm all ears. This is the last thing I need to do, to get my new sled into operation. Maybe I'd just nail it after making a 30 thousandths adjustment here...but, after three failures, I don't want to drill any more holes until I know for sure my math is right, and if it IS the darn screws....hopefully someone will have a tip to avoid shift. FWIW, I AM clamping the fence in place after making the adjustment and before drilling the hole...but, there can always be tension added by screwing in a screw, and maybe that is causing a shift that occurs after I release the pressure from the clamp?
Thanks for any help.
A = T-B/4/L*R
A - Adjusment to make to fence (positive, move corner opposite of pivot out, negative move in)
T - Top of fifth cut, thousandths
B - Bottom of fifth cut, thousandths
L - Length of fifth cut, inches (could also be thousandths)
R - Radius of fence from pivot, inches (could also be thousandths, units have to agree with L)
I am pretty sure I am running the calculations correctly. I make the four cuts, just barely trimming along the full length of the four initial edges, then on the fifth cut I cut off about a 1" wide strip. Mark the top, measure top and bottom, run the calculation exactly as described in the video (for reference I wrote it down above), and initially I was off by -0.021 or about 21 thousandths. So I made the necessary adjustment, shifted the corner opposite my pivot into the sled by that amount (using my feeler gauges, exactly as described in the video), and I was pretty confident that the adjustment was correct. The feeler gauge slipped into the gap between the pointed "stop" block and the fence nicely, without friction but without any gap or looseness. However, after making the adjustment, clamping the fence in place, drilling a hole, and driving the screw in....
My next set of 5 cuts resulted in a much worse error of +0.089! I was very careful and meticulous in my process, so I was surprised at such a discrepancy. I decided to check with a square, and according to the square, things did not look that far off, and in fact the error still appeared to be "negative"... Well, I was quite confused by that, and decide to dry another larger construction square. That one showed the opposite, a slight positive error (so now, I suspect that some of my squares, may not in fact actually be truly square...I bought a set of three, small/medium/large, and I am now suspicious that all three might have accuracy issues....and, IIRC they were made in...yup, china.) I checked my larger square against a couple of construction quick squares, which I know are pretty accurate, as well as my largest engineering square (which is still rather small compared to the construction square), and they all seem to agree as far as I can tell.
Ok, so, I'm now off positive 89 thousandths. I redo the math, and double, triple check everything, make sure I'm not too loose or too tight on the feeler. Make the adjustment.
My next five cuts, are now -0.105!!!! Checking with my construction square, seems to agree.
So I did it one more time. Now its +0.0305. It seems the swing, gets worse every time, but I cannot actually account for exactly why...although, I have one suspicion (more in a moment.)
I'm a bit baffled here. I've rewatched the parts of the video with the math about a dozen times now. There are a couple points where he covers the concept and the math, and its around 29 minutes where he actually runs the process on his newly created sled, and I am pretty sure I'm running the math correctly. Also pretty sure my numbers are correct. The length of my fence from the pivot point is 22.85", while the while fence length is a little shy of 24". There is about 3/4" or so offset from the pivot end of the fence where my screw that I'm pivoting around actually is. So the number there seems correct (not that it matters that much, a tenth of an inch up or down and it doesn't affect the final result enough to matter, as its in the 1-thou or less range.) I've checked my feeler gauges against my calipers in thousandths, and they agree. The last time I made the fifth cut, I measured about five times each. I zeroed the calipers after each measurement after making sure I'd fully, fully closed them. So I am pretty sure my measurements are within a thousandth. The numbers from my last run are:
R = 22.85
L = 17.3125
T = 0.540 (measure at top of cut 5 strip)
B = 0.446 (measure at bottom of cut 5 strip)
D = 0.094 (subtract; T-B)
C = 0.0235 (divide; D/4)
E = 0.00136 (divide by L; this is my actual error)
A = 0.0305 (multiply by R; this is the error transformed from the cut 5 test strip to the fence)
So I'm now in need of another positive adjustment, by 30 thousandths. I'm afraid to drill another hole in my fence, here, until I know for sure what's going on. Unless someone can show me an error in the math here, the only other thing I can think of, is the drilling process, or the process of screwing in the screw into the new hole, is somehow causing a shift? I tried to drill a countersink into the first couple of holes, but, with this wood and my bit, I'm not getting a perfectly round countersink, its more polygonal. I am wondering if that might be causing problems, but, I also tried to just screw it in without a countersink, letting the impact driver sink it for me. I had errors in either case.... Is that the problem? Is screwing in the screw, or maybe drilling the hole, or something, causing a shift in the fence? Outside of that, I honestly am not sure what else could be causing the problem... Based on the discrepancy in the T vs. B values of the last 5th cut, its clearly not good enough, and will result in not totally square cuts. I think I read or heard in a video, that 5 thousandths or less is good enough, but I'm 6x that.
Anyway...if anyone has any insights, I'm all ears. This is the last thing I need to do, to get my new sled into operation. Maybe I'd just nail it after making a 30 thousandths adjustment here...but, after three failures, I don't want to drill any more holes until I know for sure my math is right, and if it IS the darn screws....hopefully someone will have a tip to avoid shift. FWIW, I AM clamping the fence in place after making the adjustment and before drilling the hole...but, there can always be tension added by screwing in a screw, and maybe that is causing a shift that occurs after I release the pressure from the clamp?
Thanks for any help.