act as the legs of the miter box. Use a pencil Using your finger as a gauge, strike a line with act as a side to the miter box. This line will the other side of the miter box. Use your finger as a gauge to strike the line
invest about 10.00 in an adjustable square. Use this to gauge your miter. Before you cut, clamp your material to the saw. Wood you try to hold it. If you've already purchased a miter saw, there are clamps on the market that will match
craftsman bandsaw that needs a 5/8" mitergauge, it would be very useful to be able came with a bent-sheet-metal style mitergauge that happens to fit; but it's a pretty pathetic excuse for a mitergauge.
work here, you are mistaken. The miter groove in most Craftsman saws is exactly 3/4" wide, therefore the mitergauge bar is approximately 1/32" less I know, Sears doesn't sell a mitergauge with a 5/8" bar.
I too have a 5/8 " mitergauge slot on my Table Saw which is built by central machinery. If anyone knows where I can find a mitergauge to fit this slot please let me know. Or if anyone has a suggestion on how to widen the slot to 3/4 " so the standard miter gauges will fit.
Miter gauges are standard items and most fit a 3/4" wide by 3/8" deep slot. Your saw table should. You can get miter gauges at Delta service centers as Carlos says, or get quality upgrades, downgrades or equals at woodworker's supply