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| How to use Blade Stabilizers |
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For years many of the table saw blade manufacturers have been preaching that we should be using blade stabilizers on our table saw blades in order to get precision cuts. But what about the costs, the draw backs, and do we really need these?? Read on for the answer, you could be very surprised at what you will find ...
First of all, blade stabilizers are not particularly cheap. If you get a good pair that has been balanced and trued, expect to pay in the vicinity of $20. True, they do cut down on blade vibration on some blades but what has caused that blade vibration in the first place? Is this a result of an inferior saw blade, OR, have you inadvertently jammed some wood between the blade and the fence and bent the blade yourself? In either case, you have a blade that is off true, for situations like this blade stabilizers may be helpful. But what about depth of the cut you can make, don't they restrict depth of cut? The answer is yes, they do, which is one of their major draw backs. Another major draw back is the extra weight they are putting on your equipment like motors, bearings and belts. The extra weight in some cases may in fact cause early wear out of motors or bearing. Click on the image above for more info or to order blade stabilizers from Rockler Another cause of blades runing un-true is the arbor in the saw, is it running true and is the bearing in good shape or is this the cause of your blade-wobble. Copyright Colin Knecht
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Comments (1)
![]() written by Paul Weatherby, May 10, 2011
I found the article to be useful. I use blade stabilizers about 75% of the time, and often experiment to see if they can be improved upon. On the inner side of each stabilizer that faces the blade - put 1 layer of black electrical tape evenly spaced, but not overlapped. Trim it with a razor blade. There seems to be a noticeable improvement with vibration dampening.
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