
The handle is attached to a shaft that runs through the base and turns a pair of bevel gears that changes the plane of the rotation and turns a "shaft-screw" to raise and lower the arm.

The cabinet base was an optional accessory. A regular stand with legs was also available, or the buyer could mount the saw base to a stand or bench of their own making. I was pretty excited that this one came with the cabinet base.

The construction is pretty simple - just a metal box. Two sides, top, bottom, and back bolt together at pre-drilled holes. The door lifts up and slides into a tray under the top of the base. Shelf rails were included, but the buyer had to build their own shelves. Plans were included in the manual as the first project to build with your new Sawsmith.

The door could also be locked closed. My lock is broke. It looks like there is lock housing, but there is no locking mechanism inside the housing. And the key used to release the the power button does not fit the keyhole on the lock housing.

The casters operate similar to the Shopsmith. A lever rotates a rod with a cam on it. The cam pushes the wheels down (or does it push the cabinet up?).

Something was installed incorrectly on my caster assembly. I believe it was the cam, but I haven't yet fully investigated. The levers should always be at a 45 degree-ish angle. Push down on one side or the other to raise or lower the casters. However, my levers are horizontal (0 degrees) when the casters are retracted, and vertical (90 degrees) when extended. Not only does this make it hard to work the levers, they also hit one of the screw heads that attaches the bottom of the cabinet to the sides so I had to remove them until I fix the caster problem.
