so let us know when you actually turn it on and use it because we know you haven't as evidenced by the cheesy safety guard still attached... will they ever invent one that doesn't make the tool MORE dangerous to operate? I'm not a big fan of disabling safety devices, for instance on framing/circular saws, but table saw guards are just scary.
The Original Jimmy Jig had the stationary fence technology for over 30 years ( invented by the Generous Aberdonian to handle large sheet material to 4ft.on centre) which is always square and parallel to any cutting tool blade or tool inserted in the innovative aperture of the OJJ.
The router slides inside the aperture to allow edge jointing to 3.5 ft. wide and other router operations, If a fence is stationary it canna' deviate from square or parallel
The extended rip fence on the Dewalt is a copy of the Original Jimmy Jigs technology, macduff is flattered but Dewalt took a calculated risk as one of the many Big Bouys
so let us know when you actually turn it on and use it because we know you haven't as evidenced by the cheesy safety guard still attached... will they ever invent one that doesn't make the tool MORE dangerous to operate? I'm not a big fan of disabling safety devices, for instance on framing/circular saws, but table saw guards are just scary.
batvette 1 year ago
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The Original Jimmy Jig had the stationary fence technology for over 30 years ( invented by the Generous Aberdonian to handle large sheet material to 4ft.on centre) which is always square and parallel to any cutting tool blade or tool inserted in the innovative aperture of the OJJ.
The router slides inside the aperture to allow edge jointing to 3.5 ft. wide and other router operations, If a fence is stationary it canna' deviate from square or parallel
seumas2 2 years ago
The extended rip fence on the Dewalt is a copy of the Original Jimmy Jigs technology, macduff is flattered but Dewalt took a calculated risk as one of the many Big Bouys
seumas2 2 years ago