
As for square, after jointing wide boards, I'll have to remember to pull the fence forward for edge jointing. Maybe the 410mm guide rail will help in sliding it back and forth. If I loosen those screws too much, the movement is sloppy but still binds a bit. But that does make the fence bind as you're moving it back and forth. I've got the plastic screws that parallel the fence as snug as I can while still allowing for the fence to be moved. Once that first washer drops onto the hinge cover, it falls out of square. There's nothing to keep it from bending down at the outer edge.Īs long as the two plastic washers are riding on the table, the fence is perfectly square. The cover is held in place by two screws fastened to the edge of the bed.

It is sitting on the edge of a hinge cover here. That black plastic washer is one of two that keep the fence square with the table. This is what the underside looks like when the fence is all the way back There is no need to slide it to one end or the other to remove it. You can pick the entire fence assembly straight up. I loosened the plastic screws that parallel the fence in the two shots above so you can see there is an extrusion on the fence guide that could fit into a slot but there is no slot on the guide rail for it to slide into. You have to push that side down before locking the knob but that still doesn't get it square. At this point one of the plastic adjustment screws is no longer contacting the guide rail.

There's nothing between the fence guide and the guide rail to prevent the fence guide from lifting or tilting. This is after lifting it and tightening the lock knob. That's what it looks like when the fence is moved all the way back and before lifting it up to square it. I'm sorry, maybe I didn't explain it right.
