damok
12-17-2000, 01:04 PM
Hi. I've been lurking here for a while and have found several good tips and ideas.
I have TS2424 which I bought a couple of months ago. It replaced a benchtop Craftsman tablesaw. Boy, what a difference!
Anyway, I do have a problem with it. It is a bit tall for me. I am 5' 10" and the table saw stands at 37" which just below my navel. This makes it ackward to perform rip operations as I have to stretch to guide the wood pass the blade.
The saw is mounted on the old caster system (not the Herc-U-Lift, or whatever). And I have tried to see if there is a way lower the saw a bit. Just a couple of inches would help significantly.
I need to move the saw around so the casters are a necessity. If there is no way to lower the effective height of the table I have thought of building a step to raise my own height. However I have some concerns about the safety risks of doing that.
Any ideas? I'd appreciate any input.
Thanks
David Mora
I have TS2424 which I bought a couple of months ago. It replaced a benchtop Craftsman tablesaw. Boy, what a difference!
Anyway, I do have a problem with it. It is a bit tall for me. I am 5' 10" and the table saw stands at 37" which just below my navel. This makes it ackward to perform rip operations as I have to stretch to guide the wood pass the blade.
The saw is mounted on the old caster system (not the Herc-U-Lift, or whatever). And I have tried to see if there is a way lower the saw a bit. Just a couple of inches would help significantly.
I need to move the saw around so the casters are a necessity. If there is no way to lower the effective height of the table I have thought of building a step to raise my own height. However I have some concerns about the safety risks of doing that.
Any ideas? I'd appreciate any input.
Thanks
David Mora