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SetBuilder

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Posts posted by SetBuilder

  1. 2 hours ago, Framer joe said:

    So I hear many opinions on the track saw...I assume a track saw is for....?( I get cutting a straight line)  If your cutting sheets of mdo or birch ,etc for inside ,don't finish guys use a tablesaw ? If your cutting cdx exterior ply, don't you snap a line and use a circ saw ? Of course I'm a builder so we don't use track saws for framing or ext trim.....just curious of its need ? But glad Dewalt has one............

     

    My shop has about 10 table saws and 2 monster panel saws. A week ago I cut over 70 sheets of 5x12 pre laminated sheets of 1/4in MDF. Not fun humping them up onto a table saw to rip them, also not fun trying to keep it against the fence for a straight cut on a 5x12. I  also cut a bunch of pre laminated 4x10s of 1/4 MDF and 4x10 sheets of pre laminated 1in MDF, now those are heavy mothers.  I made all the cuts with a track saw.  I just wheeled my cut table over to the pile and loaded one at a time, I never had to bust my ass humping boards around. I'd also say the cuts were straighter than a table saw, because there is always the issue of big boards coming away from the fence.

     

    Also the laminate often over hangs the MDF core so it needs to be trimmed back to the core to get a straight edge to go against the fence. On some I just used a router to clean up the edge, but often both the top and bottom layer over hang. So its quicker to just lay a track down on the board and make a cut to get a clean edge.

    • Like 2
  2. 1 hour ago, Grumpy MSG said:

    If you are going to hook a hose up are you really going to notice the cord attached to it?

     

    Good point, pretty much the way I feel about cordless compressors. If I'm going to run an air hose from it does a cord make that much of a difference?

    • Like 3
  3. On 5/10/2017 at 4:27 AM, rrmccabe said:

    I am surprised with the large quantity of sheet goods that you guys cut, you do not have a 2700 (100 inch) rail.

     

    My most used rails are 2700 and 1400.

     

    Maybe you need to keep them small to transport?

    Like I said, most guys don't utilize the Festool tools we have. Normally those big sheets are cut on a table saw and panel saw.

     

    I did not feel like busting my ass lifting all those sheets since we had a huge build to do. 

     

    I told my lead man man how I wanted to do it and he let me and was happy with the out come.

    He just kept me cutting for days and the rest of the crew assembling.

     

    As I utilize the equipment more and they see it's more productive I will ask for more accessories.

     

    A couple of months ago I grabbed a Festool plainer from the tool room. It still had the twist ties on the cord.

     

     

    • Like 2
  4. 6 hours ago, JimboS1ice said:

    Hey you gotta do what you gotta do, what did you do to square it up?

    He measured off the edge of the MDF to the base of the saw. 

     

    Screwed the plate to the MDF and plunged the blade in. 

     

    The fence was measured from edge of MDF and blade to check for square and screwed down. Not great for ease of adjustability, but it worked for our needs. 

    • Like 1
  5. 1 hour ago, ChrisK said:

    So I was thinking you were using the cyclone kit with the Festool, is that accurate? I've been using my Midi with the cyclone for a year now and haven't changed the bag since. It's an awesome addition and is placed on my

    Midi with the Kapex.

    No cyclone kit, this is just shop supplied Festool. Most guys dont even know we have it. When I'm done I kind of hide them away in the tool room.

     

    We had a 74 in and 2 53in tracks. When I had a ton of 12 footers to rip, I asked my lead man if we could get another 74in track. He had one delivered within an hour.  

    • Like 2
  6. 10 hours ago, rrmccabe said:

     

    Im pretty much the only one who uses the vacuum with the track saw and 1400 router. We have 2 CT 36s and a CT 11. The CT 11 has a European plug on it, so I have no idea the last time that one was used.

     

  7. 9 hours ago, ChrisK said:

    Holy crap. You guys must've been doing a LOT of cutting and sanding! Of course not being a pro means saving some serious cashola from buying filter bags by the five pack!

    Our tool room guy has a laborer empty out the bags so we can reuse them.  Probably not the best practice but better than no dust collection at all.

    • Like 1
  8. I pretty much never clean my tools. I feel compressed air just blows dust and debris INTO the tool. Who cares if its on the outside of the tool. I work with a ton of MDF, I just shake the dust off and thats about it. If there is a shop vac around or a dust extractor I'll use that. The only thing I used compress air on is the outside of my box and the top of the table saw. 

    My mechanic tools just get wiped off with a rag before they go back in the box.

    • Like 1
  9. I'm not sure what happened here, I was cutting some very light gauge aluminum L stock and the blade grabbed the piece. My hand got a little banged up, but nothing serious. This is what the blade looked like afterwards.

     

    Thing is I don't know if it happened from grabbing the piece or if the teeth were missing and thats why it grabbed the piece. I usually go pretty slow hen cutting Aluminum, so I probably would have felt vibrations if it was like that when I started.

     

    It was in a 12in miter saw

    IMG_5678.JPG

  10. We were on stage and needed to cut down a bunch of Sentrex strips. We did not have a table saw with us, so my lead man made this. 

     

    He did all the cutting himself, I thought it was a pretty cool idea.

     

     

    IMG_5690.JPG

     

    • Like 6
  11. 23 hours ago, rrich1 said:

    @setbuilder I'm hoping with glueing it up in so many stages it will keep it as flat as possible. If needed I'll try and plane it down.

    Sent from my Pixel XL using Tapatalk
     

    I'll search for it when I get a chance. A while back I watched a vidieo where it showed how to make a sled to true up a table with a router. 

    He screwed rails on the side of the table and ran the sled off them.

  12. So funny, a guy I work with is into tools as much as I am… His fiancé looked at his searches on amazon and said  No Festool for you! that stuff is too expensive.  He wants a track saw as bad as I do. Since he is getting married in a few months I suggested he put it on his wedding registry. :)   Now I'm afraid he will get a track saw before me.

    • Like 6
  13. The guy who posted the pics was a freelance scenic painter, not a full time employee of the shop. we are jamming right now, 70+ hours last week. 

    We were instructed no phones out in the shop. The client hired security to watch the cameras in the shop till work is complete. 

     

    It sucks because we build some crazy stuff. This is something we pumped out in a couple of days, so you guys will just have to see the after, not before.   I switched crews recently and build cooler stuff now :)

     

    • Like 4
  14. I went through my previous threads and deleted a bunch of pics that I posted.  A painter at my shop posted a pic of a set being built in FB and tagged it. Well it ended up getting picked up by the media and its a big shit storm with possible law suits. He will probably never work in the industry again. I was always pretty careful about what I posted, but just trying to be safe.

    • Like 3
  15. I recently made this piece, its a bench / light box. I used the CMT triangle bit for all the routing. It was so nice, no filing the edges, just a light sanding with 400 sand paper. 

     

    The black tape is on the corners because the formica is not glued to the Milkplex so its removable, we were just trying to hold the corners together for shipping. 

     

    I trashed the bearing the next day trimming laminate that had a heavy protective plastic coating on it. The triangle did not like it and kept getting hung up, before I realized it the plastic triangle popped off and I screwed up about 6ins of the edge. Live and learn :)

     

    My lead man just ordered 10 more of the CMTs with triangle bearing and I ordered some with a square bearing from a Amana and Whiteside  to see how they compare.

     

     

     

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