heathicus wrote:I'm not mathemagician, but I'm still lost... With the table tilted to 22.5 degrees, isn't it 22.5 degrees on one side of the blade, and 67.5 degrees on the other side of the blade?
The table is at 0 degrees and the blade angle to the table would measure 90 degrees on both sides of the blade. Tilt the table 22.5 degrees and the angle between the blade and the table would measure 112.5 degrees on one side and 67.5 degrees on the other. Both angles have to add up to 180 degrees not 90 degrees. Hope this helps.
SDSSmith wrote:The table is at 0 degrees and the blade angle to the table would measure 90 degrees on both sides of the blade. Tilt the table 22.5 degrees and the angle between the blade and the table would measure 112.5 degrees on one side and 67.5 degrees on the other. Both angles have to add up to 180 degrees not 90 degrees. Hope this helps.
I understand now. The table, in relation to its original 0 degree position would now be 22.5 on one side of the blade and 67.5 on the other side. But, that would result in a cut of 112.5 degrees on one side and 67.5 degrees on the other side.
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Heath
Central Louisiana
-10ER - SN 13927, Born 1949, Acquired October 2008, Restored November, 2008
-10ER - SN 35630, Born 1950, Acquired April 2009, Restored May 2009, A34 Jigsaw
-Mark V - SN 212052, Born 1986, Acquired Sept 2009, Restored March 2010, Bandsaw
-10ER - SN 39722, Born 1950, Acquired March 2011, awaiting restoration
heathicus wrote:I understand now. The table, in relation to its original 0 degree position would now be 22.5 on one side of the blade and 67.5 on the other side. But, that would result in a cut of 112.5 degrees on one side and 67.5 degrees on the other side.
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You are correct if the piece you are cutting is laid flat on the table. But if it is 90 degrees to the table the geometry changes.......112.5 degrees minus 90 degrees yields the desired 22.5 degrees.
What you depict in this picture is equivalent to cutting a single piece of wood with the table tilted to 22.5°. Now, discard the piece on the right and create a second piece identical to the piece on the left. Now when you mate the two pieces, you get a joint the positions the two pieces at 45° with respect to one another.
"Making Sawdust Safely" Dusty
Sent from my Dell XPS using Firefox.
[quote="dusty"]What you depict in this picture is equivalent to cutting a single piece of wood with the table tilted to 22.5°]I must not get it...... The only thing in Heath's picture that is 22.5 degrees is the table. The angles left on the cut edges of workpieces after using this set up are 67.5 degrees and 112.5 degrees (as depicted in Heath's picture). Maybe the heat is getting to me, but I would think it is hotter in Tucson.
That is what I was thinking! Tilt the table 22.5 clockwise from horizontal. Cut the workpiece END laying it flat on the FENCE. Repeat second piece.
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Goldie(Bought New SN 377425)/4" jointer/6" beltsander/12" planer/stripsander/bandsaw/powerstation /Scroll saw/Jig saw /Craftsman 10" ras/Craftsman 6" thicknessplaner/ Dayton10"tablesaw(restoredfromneighborstrashpile)/ Mark VII restoration in 'progress'/ 10E[/size](SN E3779) restoration in progress, a 510 on the back burner and a growing pile of items to be eventually returned to useful life. - aka Red Grange
If you are trying to make a 45 degree acute miter, split is 22.5 degree but the cut angle is 90 - 22.5 or 67.5 degrees. Make a jig to hold the wood at 45 degrees to the table, set the table angle to 22.5 degrees, rotated clockwise. Resulting cut with the jig and wood to the left of the blade is a 22.5 degree acute angle. I'd be extremely careful with this as the miter gauge may be very close to the blade. Far safer to do this on a miter saw, you will still need the jig to add the additional 45 degrees. You could also make a 67.5 degree jig and keep the wood to the right without rotating the SS table at all.