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FENCE END VIEW Å\gddkZÊYZZe

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MITER SLED

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his miter-cutting sled offers an 80-tooth crosscut blade for through the fence to avoid

T a dual-rail guidance system


that rides in the miter-
gauge slots of your tablesaw and
smooth, ready-to-glue surfaces.
To make two workpieces of
equal length, start by measuring
weakening the sled base. ª

smooth-acting stops that ride in and marking your first workpiece. PROS:
tracks. It also features a safety Miter one end of the workpiece as ฀;VhiXjih!ZkZc^ci]^X`!]VgY
channel downÅ\gddkZÊYZZe
the middle to keep marked, using the appropriate  bViZg^Vah#
your hands away from the table- fence, and then transfer the ฀8dbW^cVi^dcd[iVWaZhVlVcY
saw blade. workpiece to the opposite fence.  _^\egdk^YZhVXXjgViZ!Xdch^h
¢ µ drawing
To build the jig, see the Line up the mark with the blade,  iZci!VcYhbddi]Xjih#
Æ
( for the dimensions.Ã
above We slide the stop against the already ฀BV`Zh[^cZig^bb^c\Xjih#
used Baltic birch for theÃ\gddkZ
base and mitered end, tighten it, and make ฀>cZmeZch^kZidWj^aY#
hard Æ\gddkZ
maple for the other parts.
åYZZe the second cut. Leave the stop in
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Refer to the photos on next page place, and miter the second CONS:
for building tips that ÂYZZe an
guarantee workpiece in the same sequence. ฀=VgYid]VcYaZadc\
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exact fit on your saw and a pair of Remember to stop your cut when  ldg`e^ZXZh#
perfectly aligned miter fences. Use the blade’s highest point passes ฀9ZY^XViZYid)*•Xjihdcan#
DP-00693

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