Any help, advise, or comment appreciated.
I suppose a belt sander could be attached also for a "table sander".
Anyway, let me know.

azmotoman wrote:Oh yeah! The Black and Decker or HF vise table/saw horse works really well for such things. I have used it as a table for my router. Opened the jaws, invert the router, clamp it between the plastic jaw inserts and turn out small pieces of trim that I would not otherwise be able to handle.
Nice for turning out trivets, trim or the small legs I made for our set of barrister cases.
It would do the same with a sander or circular saw.
Of course, mine is the HF brand. ( http://www.harborfreight.com/folding-clamping-workbench-with-movable-pegs-47844.html )
bobhenry wrote:I had to make several long rips in large flat stock while building Chubby and I found 2 padded "C" clamps and the extruded channel off of one side of an old aluminum storm door made a great straight edge. The lexan I cut for the roof would have been all but impossible to rip without this guide. I simply clamped it in place allowing the 1 1/2" offset of my saw and cut as normal.
However this setup will not allow you to mill 2x4 into 2x2 and such. Then the table saw will shine.
Return to Teardrop Construction Tips & Techniques
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 4 guests