

This together with a feather board may help. You may need to adjust your fence so that you have a very slightly greater distance between blade teeth and fence at the rear. If the saw marks you mention are being made as the rear teeth are coming up out of the table, the work piece may being lifted slightly as it passes the rear teeth. Is your throat plate flat and flush with the table? If so, when you use your machinists square, are you placing it only against the saw plate and not touching any of the teeth?Īre you using a feather board to hold the work piece snug against the fence? I assume you are using a carbide tooth blade. A front face view and a birds eye of both sides. Below is a pics of the marks it’s leaving behind where the back of the blade is causing the problem.

It looks like from the half way point there is a second angle and it looks like the back of the blade is doing itĪny ideas. At least not the whole height of this peice. when checked with a machinists square there is no light. 004 difference from bottom to top of blade. It’s almost as if the blade is / towards the fence. When I make 2 cuts and keep the tops together, perfect, no seem. When the cut is made the bottom of the peice has cut marks, like if it was being pushed towards the back of the blade. Peice is run through a planer and jointer prior to the table saw Checked alignments on the blade being 90 to the table top, parallel to the miter slots, parallel to the fence.ĭifferent wood from scrapsof maple, Poplar and plywood all producing the same
