cowboy25 Posted Saturday at 15:33 Posted Saturday at 15:33 So I have this table saw I use in my workshop I've had it for a few years and recently changed the blade for the first time with a nice Rutland blade after the original one was blunt as anything causing the wood to smoke and taking ages to cut. I also cleaned out the table saw whilst removing the old blade. The problem is I am using it currently to cut cls studs to the desired length for my project and the blade keeps catching/ jumping/ kicking when I use it even though I'm being quite careful to the point I don't want to use it anymore. The blade seemed ok for the first few weeks with no jumping happening but now not so much. What an I doing wrong? I never really had this problem with my old smoky blade I would have thought a new sharp blade would cause the table saw to kick less.
ProDave Posted Saturday at 16:07 Posted Saturday at 16:07 33 minutes ago, cowboy25 said: The problem is I am using it currently to cut cls studs to the desired length for my project I would say wrong saw for the job. You want a chop saw for that. A table saw is normally used with a fence for cutting a length of timber down to a particular size. The complete lack of a guard over the blade does not inspire confidence. 5
Nickfromwales Posted Saturday at 16:22 Posted Saturday at 16:22 Stop using it for cutting CLS, and get a cheap chop/mitre saw. Dangerous as FECK! 1
Nickfromwales Posted Saturday at 16:23 Posted Saturday at 16:23 For £60 you could throw it away at the end of the job!
Mr Punter Posted Saturday at 16:48 Posted Saturday at 16:48 40 minutes ago, ProDave said: The complete lack of a guard over the blade does not inspire confidence. And I think there may be a small issue with the dust extraction...
cowboy25 Posted Saturday at 17:37 Author Posted Saturday at 17:37 (edited) 1 hour ago, ProDave said: I would say wrong saw for the job. You want a chop saw for that. A table saw is normally used with a fence for cutting a length of timber down to a particular size. Ah ok I did have a chop saw but thought I could change to a table saw (plus jigsaw) as a 'do it all saw', didn't realise people didn't use it for what I am currently doing. I don't remember having this problem with my old blade but perhaps I wasn't cutting much cls. 51 minutes ago, Mr Punter said: And I think there may be a small issue with the dust extraction... I have the saw located at my workshop entrance so the most dust goes straight outside. Edited Saturday at 17:40 by cowboy25
Nickfromwales Posted Saturday at 17:40 Posted Saturday at 17:40 1 minute ago, cowboy25 said: Ah ok I did have a chop saw but thought I could change to a table saw (plus jigsaw) as a 'do it all saw', didn't realise people didn't use it for what I am currently doing. I don't remember having this problem with my old blade but perhaps I wasn't cutting much cls. A table saw is for sheet material, or trimming down timbers lengthways, not for cross cutting etc. You'll just hurt yourself or the saw. You'll be able to do mitres etc with a chop (mitre) saw too. 3
jack Posted 20 hours ago Posted 20 hours ago You're lucky you haven't seriously injured yourself. Table saws are one of the most dangerous tools in the shop, even when used for what they're designed for. You can use a table saw for cross cuts, but you need a cross cut sled or similar. Easy enough to knock one up, but even then it really isn't designed for cross cutting long pieces of wood. 100% chop saw territory.
SimonD Posted 18 hours ago Posted 18 hours ago On 13/06/2026 at 16:33, cowboy25 said: a nice Rutland blade Hmm, IMHO I'd be a bit cautious about that blade. I know Rutlands have built some kind of reputation, but I bought something from them that was total and utter over-priced rubbish. I was reluctant to touch them again until I ordered some tools from Bang Good having watched the YouTube channel 'China tools' - and yes there are some quality bits of kit that can be had - but what was very interesting is that one measuring tool I received came with Rutland written all over the tool and packaging even though it was from a totally different vendor and about a 1/3 of the price. After this I'd never buy anything from Rutland. I'd be going to buy a well know and trusted brand of blade first. And then seriously look at and question how I'm using the tool and whether I'm doing it correctly and appropriately! 😉
cowboy25 Posted 7 hours ago Author Posted 7 hours ago One thing I forgot to mention and not clear in the photograph is the left hand wing of the table saw was bent downwards about half an inch so I was trying to accomodate for this as well when cutting the cls, so obviously this just added to the danger. I have since sorted out that bent left wing - a couple blows with a lump hammer at the top of the support struts where they connect to the table surface sorted that right out, so now the surface is completely level. But yeah I'll no longer be using the table saw for cross cuts, I don't really have the space or £'s for a mitre saw sadly I'll use another type of saw for now, its called a hand saw. Thanks all.
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