Additional Safety Rules
e. NEVER place your face or body in line with the cutting tool.
•NEVER place your fingers and hands in the path of the sawblade or other cutting tool.
•NEVER reach in back of the cutting tool with either hand to hold down or support the workpiece, remove wood scraps, or for any other reason. Avoid awkward operations and hand positions where sudden slip could cause fingers or hand to move into a sawblade or other cutting tool.
•DO NOT perform any operation “FREEHAND” — always use either the rip fence or the miter gauge to position and guide the work.
•NEVER use the rip fence when crosscutting or the miter gauge when ripping. DO NOT use the rip fence as a length stop.
•NEVER hold onto or touch the “free end” of the workpiece or a “free piece” that is cut off, while power is “ON” and/or the sawblade is rotating.
•Shut “OFF” the saw and disconnect the power cord when removing the table insert, changing the cutting tool, removing or replacing the blade guard, or making adjustments.
•Provide adequate support to the rear and sides of the saw table for wider or long workpieces.
•Plastic and composition (like hardboard) materials may be cut on your saw. However, since these are usually quite hard and slippery, the
f. If you stall or jam the sawblade in the workpiece, turn saw “OFF”, remove the workpiece from the sawblade, and check to see if the sawblade is parallel to the table slots or grooves and if the spreader is in proper alignment with the sawblade. If ripping at the time, check to see if rip fence is parallel with the sawblade. Readjust as indicated.
g. NEVER gang crosscut — lining up more than one work- piece in front of the blade (stacked vertically, or horizontally outward on the table) and then pushing thru sawblade. The blade could pick up one or more pieces and cause a binding or loss of control and possible injury.
h. DO NOT remove small pieces of
11. KNOW YOUR CUTTING TOOLS
Dull, gummy or improperly sharpened or set cutting tools can cause material to stick, jam, stall the saw, or kickback at the operator. Minimize potential injury by proper cutting tool and machine maintenance. NEVER ATTEMPT TO FREE A STALLED SAWBLADE WITHOUT FIRST TURNING THE SAW OFF.
a. NEVER use grinding wheels, abrasive
b. USE ONLY RECOMMENDED ACCESSORIES.
c. Crosscutting operations are more conveniently worked and with greater safety if an auxiliary wood facing is attached to the miter gauge. (See Page 62).
d. Make sure the top of the cutting tool rotates toward you when standing in normal operating position. Also make sure the cutting tool, arbor collars and arbor nut are installed prop- erly. Keep the cutting tool as low as possible for the oper- ation being performed. Keep all guards in place whenever possible.
•Do not use any blade or other cutting tool marked for an operating speed less than 4800 R.P.M. Never use a cutting tool larger in diameter than the diameter for which the saw was designed. For greatest safety and efficiency when rip- ping, use the maximum diameter blade for which the saw is designed, since under these conditions the spreader is near- est the blade.
e. Make sure the table insert is flush or slightly below the table surface on all sides except for rear side. NEVER oper- ate the saw unless the proper insert is installed.
NOTE AND FOLLOW SAFETY INSTRUCTIONS THAT APPEAR
ON THE FRONT OF YOUR TABLE SAW.
4.