How not to mess up your first dado purchase 👍Thanks for the coverage on shim tweaking after sharpening and plywood variances with dado dial in. I now feel better prepared to make that big purchase.
I once read that a 6" dado set has less inherent flex. But in practice, I have never seen this to be an issue between 6" and 8" sizes. An 8" can make approx 3" deep dado, but that would be extreme. I run 6" dado stack on a 5 HP 10" saw.
How not to mess up your first dado purchase 👍Thanks for the coverage on shim tweaking after sharpening and plywood variances with dado dial in. I now feel better prepared to make that big purchase.
Glad I could help. Working on plenty of videos at the moment. Next one will be table saw and sliding compound saw blades. Then after that clamps.
Dont forget to put the smallest chippers and all shims next to the first blade because some might fall into the threads and screw things up.
Ya depends on the thread but mine isn’t like that.
My question is how do you decide whether to use a 6” or a 8”?
A 10” saw takes a 8” Dado but always consult your manual.
It also depends on how much horsepower you saw has.
I once read that a 6" dado set has less inherent flex. But in practice, I have never seen this to be an issue between 6" and 8" sizes. An 8" can make approx 3" deep dado, but that would be extreme. I run 6" dado stack on a 5 HP 10" saw.
@@richpeggyfranks490Thanks. I was looking for this information.
The best dado set to buy is the one that every cabinet shop uses.
*it's never Freud
Why?
Will be doing a video on why Freud blades are so good very soon.