


I have a Unisaw with a left hand cast table wing but a wood wing on teh right that extends out to the 52" width of the fence. My only complaint about it is that the aluminum extrusion the fence tightens down to has to be against a perfectly straight surface otherwise the fence will angle in and out relative to the blade. I have an older version of the Mule Accusquare. You could create a whole slip-on for the T3 but that seems like a bit of a pain. The DeltaT3 fence doesnt look like it has any provision. Thanks AdamTry and get a fence that has t-slots or some other mechanism for attaching a sacrificial face to it. Any advice on what model and website to buy from would be greatly appreciated. Busy bee has a couple models and I see the delta T3 fence for sale in Canada but that's about it. The riving knife pressed the strips tight to the fence behind the blade, so I got very smooth cuts, without any of the chatter marks you usually get with thin strips.Hey all, trying to upgrade my table saw fence and struggling to find anything for sale in Canada. Then, starting with a scrap between the knife and the fence to hold the knife vertical, I made my cuts, pushing the first stick through with a second, and so on. That oversize - very tall - riving knife you end up with also makes a handy hold-in for very narrow strips: I loosely hooked a bungie to one of the now-unused pivot holes for the guard, so that the knife was pulled slightly towards the fence. I haven't gotten around to taking apart my 90s-era Unisaw guard, but at least I didn't throw it away. I think it was Tage Frid who did the same thing with his Unisaw guard, also adding a wood guard atop it that was sized and shaped much like a throat-plate insert. I did that with my old, early-70s 9" Contractor's Saw - a great, cast-iron tool. You can the the standard guard apart, throwing away the plastic guard and anti-kickback parts, saving only the riving portion.
