I really enjoy the way you present your process. I'm intrigued as hell! Looking forward to the next installment. Thank you for sharing such thoughtful and thought provoking content. I'm a fan already. lol
Tim, love the videos and design. Can you tell us what size extrusions you used for the build? Be nice to add more details to the descriptions of each video.
Hi, looks very promising. Really well thought out design and by using a common contractor saw many people can build this without buying a new or expensive saw. Will you publish plans and parts list? Really well thought
Hi. Thank you. I´m in the middle of making part 3. I think I´m going to make a final chapter with parts and their dimensions, experience, pro´s and cons.
@@tims.2832 Would be great. I have been playing around with different designs myself, mostly using standard linear rails (have a few meters of skf 25mm left over from another project), but have been concerned about dust. Your solution looks elegant, and from the looks of it the saw can be removed quickly. What program are you using for modeling?
Hallo Tim Sieht sehr gut aus und bin auch schon sehr gespannt auf die nächsten Teile. Habe die Bosch Pts 10 und würde die auch gerne erweitern. Habe bis jetzt leider noch nichts gefunden was annähernd an deiner Idee ran kommt. Freue mich auf die nächsten Teile. Abo hast Du schon mal. Lg Stephan
No, its not a great design until its up and working. In particular I am curious to see if the weight of the sliding mechanism doesn't cause the saw to tip over on the left side. Perhaps this is why there have been no updates since January. In any case, why spend so much effort and money in putting a nice system onto such a cheap table saw?
Really great innovation, research and determination but why add so much engineering to a $500 table saw that doesn't have the precision of a cabinet table saw. No matter what you add to it it is still a contractor saw. Because the motor, trunnions, arbor assembly and gearing are all mounted as one unit precision will never be accomplished. Solve all the problems you mentioned you wanted to fix just by purchasing a track saw. More precise, more portable and more versatile.
Just found this! Thank you UA-cam for suggesting it, I'm excited to see what else is going to happen in part 3
I really enjoy the way you present your process. I'm intrigued as hell! Looking forward to the next installment. Thank you for sharing such thoughtful and thought provoking content. I'm a fan already. lol
Hey, thanks very much.
Many thanks, Tim. Amazing video, and a real eye-opener. Hopefully, we get the full series soon.
Quite an impressive project! I am looking forward to the next steps...
Wow. Looking forward to the next videos! I'm thinking of doing something similar with a Festool TKS 80 EBS.
Part III! It's been months. Don't keep us hanging. :)
Clever stuff 👍
Tim, love the videos and design. Can you tell us what size extrusions you used for the build? Be nice to add more details to the descriptions of each video.
Habe das gleiche bei meiner TKS realisiert, hab den tisch etwas größer gebaut um hinten noch eine oberfräse einzubauen.
Great design, great videos! Keep up with the good work!! Looking forward to the next videos
seem very interesting. Wait for see the next step
Hi, looks very promising. Really well thought out design and by using a common contractor saw many people can build this without buying a new or expensive saw.
Will you publish plans and parts list? Really well thought
Hi. Thank you. I´m in the middle of making part 3. I think I´m going to make a final chapter with parts and their dimensions, experience, pro´s and cons.
@@tims.2832 Would be great.
I have been playing around with different designs myself, mostly using standard linear rails (have a few meters of skf 25mm left over from another project), but have been concerned about dust. Your solution looks elegant, and from the looks of it the saw can be removed quickly.
What program are you using for modeling?
Any progress?
@@anderssrheim1404 Igus just delivered my 2meter drylin w single rail ;-) gimme a few days
To me the worlds best sliding table is one where entire bed slides and saw remains stationary.
Is this the Bosch "blau" Multimaterial blade?
Nice work
Very great project :-) when do you do the other one ?
Hallo Tim
Sieht sehr gut aus und bin auch schon sehr gespannt auf die nächsten Teile. Habe die Bosch Pts 10 und würde die auch gerne erweitern. Habe bis jetzt leider noch nichts gefunden was annähernd an deiner Idee ran kommt. Freue mich auf die nächsten Teile. Abo hast Du schon mal. Lg Stephan
In Teil 3 habe ich gerade eine knifflige Stelle gelöst, das wird gut. Ich hoffe, ich bekomme Teil 3 rasch fertig. Gruß
@@tims.2832 Gut Ding will Weile haben. Nur Geduld. Wenn es das Ultimative wird braucht es die Zeit. Bin wie viel sehr gespannt. Gruß
links to where you bought your parts would be much appreciated
No, its not a great design until its up and working. In particular I am curious to see if the weight of the sliding mechanism doesn't cause the saw to tip over on the left side. Perhaps this is why there have been no updates since January. In any case, why spend so much effort and money in putting a nice system onto such a cheap table saw?
Fifty dollar horse, two hundred dollar saddle.
When talking about format saws, the sliding table ist the horse.
Really great innovation, research and determination but why add so much engineering to a $500 table saw that doesn't have the precision of a cabinet table saw. No matter what you add to it it is still a contractor saw. Because the motor, trunnions, arbor assembly and gearing are all mounted as one unit precision will never be accomplished. Solve all the problems you mentioned you wanted to fix just by purchasing a track saw. More precise, more portable and more versatile.