I’m glad you mentioned the nesting screws for adjusting the miter mounts
@SW4Life2029 ай бұрын
I ran into the same issue but had to swap out the adjustment knobs, The two longer ones support the extension slide.
@juliosanchez36785 ай бұрын
Are the support arms adjustable for height difference?
@j0esmith7383 жыл бұрын
"It's a tight fit" you said because you slide the back in first, and pressed on the front. It's a lot easier if you do the opposite. The stop guides work much better if they're on the other side. For production work, AKA a professional, you need a solid stop bar, otherwise it moves and it's not a stop bar.
@Firstworse9703 жыл бұрын
Where you been miss your videos
@the-papaw3 жыл бұрын
I wonder if you could mount a table saw on this thing?
@jeffhester14433 жыл бұрын
I have the ryobi 8in T/S and wonder the same thing. With a 3/4 plywood mounting base and careful positioning I think it would work. Just keep in mind not to apply the wrong or too much force as to turn it over. I'm going to try it.
@the-papaw3 жыл бұрын
@@jeffhester1443 I already ordered and got the extra mounting arms (less than $30 at Home Depot) and was going to try it mounted on plywood as well using a 10" table saw. I know the adjusting board supports at each end of the stand will not be tall enough as is. The table saw deck is much higher than the miter saw, still thinking about it and sure I can make something work though. With the 2 sets of arms, I am hoping I can pop either of them on without having to take the arms off miter saw and putting on table saw. I am thinking about mounting the table saw so I can somehow use the extending supports like a feed table.
@jeffhester14433 жыл бұрын
Maybe place the T/S 90^ to the stand and somehow raise one ext as a runoff? This would also allow a greater push force in line with the stand instead of across it.
@the-papaw3 жыл бұрын
@@jeffhester1443 Yes Sir, that's how I plan on doing it
@jeffhester14433 жыл бұрын
Papaw I wish I had time for a parallel development but I just dont. And you are way ahead so I will offer my thoughts. Facing the end of the stand, pull the saw all the way toward you then lock the bars. This will allow greatest body movement around the saw to minimize in line blade exposure. Also rubber tubing clamps might be used to stop the locking bars from sliding forward. Finally, keep all blade guards in place for now while testing until the concept proves safe which I believe it will.
@ralphyboy38562 жыл бұрын
Perfect for home projects 💪💪💯💯
@JP-kg6wn Жыл бұрын
right on thank you.
@johnm57143 жыл бұрын
So...it’s broken out of the box and your ok with that?-
@knoxville3633 жыл бұрын
Glad to see u back on KZbin Bob... Miss your vape stuff
@wgmyler2 жыл бұрын
I bought the DeWalt DWX 724 stand and there was a minor fitment issue with the work stops/support that irritated my OCD so I bought this Ryobi stand thinking maybe it would be just as good at half the price. The Ryobi build quality is so poor that I knew I'd be returning it 10 minutes after getting out of the box. The legs were uneven, cheap plastic caps on the stand were already smashed in, and a cheap plastic cap on the mounting bracket just fell off before I even had a chance to use it. I suspect there are only a couple reasons why KZbin reviewers aren't bashing this stand is because 1) they're amateurs (which I admittedly am) that haven't compared it to anything else and have a very low bar for quality, or 2) they're shills paid off by Ryobi. Even as an amateur, if I couldn't afford a better stand like the DeWalt that has better build quality / design features, I would use saw horses and plywood before buying this stand. I'm not trying to pick on your personally, I'm copying this comment to multiple videos because more customers should be warned before buying this. At least your video mentioned that broken support arm.
@Rmilms2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the heads up, I'm over shit products that get good reviews for the reasons you stated. :)