![]() Antron Argaiv on Garage Door Opener Ejection Seat.Sgllama on Pieca Is A Pi Camera With Some Very Nice Lenses.BrightBlueJim on Plywood Bicycle Makes Frame Building More Accessible.Sgllama on Say No To Obsolescence, Wire Up Your House With Fiber.Wells Campbell on Pieca Is A Pi Camera With Some Very Nice Lenses.Posted in Tool Hacks Tagged LED hack, miter saw, shadow line Post navigationĮurope’s Energy Squeeze Pushes Large Hadron Collider To Halt Operations 45 Comments But overall, has a great little mod that speeds up his workflow more accurately. Of course, you can always go deeper down the hole of accuracy and measurement. Just the few test cuts he made seemed entirely accurate. The result is impressive, with a clear shadow on even darker hardwoods. After some quick modifications, hot glue, and duct tape, the light was installed, and the wires were routed while still allowing the saw its full range of motion. ![]() It worked great as a small compact light fitting the blade housing. ![]() Previously, had tried to use LED strips, but after a comment suggested it, he found a sewing light on a gooseneck. You can also see your marks as the laser doesn’t shine over them. By shining a line at the top of the blade, you get a mark where the blade will cut precisely. The blade has a thickness (known as kerf), and with a laser to one side, you can only accurately cut on one side of the line. decided that his after-market laser wasn’t entirely accurate enough and added a shadow line instead. But over a year or two, you might have found the laser to have drifted or skewed into a crooked line. The goal was to show where on the piece the saw was going to cut. If you’ve bought a miter saw in the past few years, you might have noticed the LED “laser” that came with it.
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