1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a saw table that directly receives a power saw.
2. Background Art
Fabricating a building product at a job site often requires cutting building components to a specific length. The cut may be square or at a mitered angle. A portable circular saw is frequently used for such cutting. Accurate cutting often requires mounting the saw to a fixture such as a saw table.
In addition, different building products require different cutting blades. For example, wood may cut with the grain using a ripping blade or across the grain with a fine-toothed blade. Cement board and fiberglass products may need a carbide coated blade. Therefore, multiple powered saws, each having a specialized blade, may need to be interchanged quickly on the saw table.
Portable saw tables may have a saw track assembly that includes a pair of guide rails for supporting and guiding the circular saw while cutting a workpiece. Guide rails are often categorized as either an open rail design or a closed rail design. Open rail designs allow quick mounting and dismounting of the circular saw. Either gravity or downward pressure on the saw is relied upon to keep the saw seated on the rails during cutting operations. Closed rail designs often use a mounting plate for attaching the saw to the guide rails. Mounting plates are complex and time consuming to use. The saw must be semi-permanently affixed to the mounting plate which is, in turn, attached to the saw table. Attaching the saw to the mounting plate negates the portability advantage of the saw. In addition, some saw tables have a square mounting plate that is used to retain the sole plate of the saw. The square mounting plate is rotated 90° to convert from a rip cut position to a cross-cut position.
There is a long felt need for a saw table that allows almost any saw to be readily attached to the saw table in a fully captured manner without requiring attachment to a mounting plate.
The above problems and needs are addressed by the invention as summarized below.
According to one aspect of the present invention a saw table is provided that directly receives a power saw. The combination includes a work table defining a work surface and a boom that is pivotally secured to the work table. The boom has opposed rails that are spaced apart to guide the saw. The rails define a retention structure. The saw includes a sole plate having a top surface. The retention structure directly engages the sole plate's top surface to prevent inadvertent removal of the saw from the boom. The rails also define an access opening through which the sole plate of the saw is inserted and removed from the retention structure.
In another embodiment of the invention, a saw table is provided for a power saw that has a rectangular sole plate. A boom is secured to the work table that pivots about an axis that is substantially perpendicular to the work surface. The boom has opposed rails that are spaced apart to guide the saw and define elongated channels that engage the sole plate. The channels prevent upward removal of the saw from the boom along the majority of the length of the boom. At least one channel has a cut out that defines an upward access opening through which the rectangular sole plate of the saw may be pivotably disengaged from the boom.
According to other features of the saw table, the boom has a base that is capable of pivoting from 0 to 90° about an axis that is substantially perpendicular to the work surface. The boom has a track defined by opposed rails that are raised above the base of the boom. The rails comprise opposed elongated C-channels having a flange. The C-channels engage the sole plate to prevent removal of the saw from the boom. At least one rail defines an upward access opening at a cut out of the flange along a limited portion of the length of the rail. The cut out directly receives the sole plate when the rails are spaced apart to properly guide the saw.
Referring to
The top deck 18 of the saw table 10 is split into a right portion 26 and a left portion 28 that slide together and apart on opposite sides of the boom 14. A pair of tubular extension rails 30 are slidably received in the support deck 20. A roller 32 is rotatably supported by the extension rails 30 to facilitate movement of work pieces onto and off of the top deck 18. A split fence 36 is attached to the back side of the top deck 18 and moves with the right and left portions 26, 28 of the top deck 18.
The boom 14 includes a right track rail 40 and a left track rail 42 that are secured to a track base 44. The rails 40, 42 are secured to the track base 44 by track cross bars 46 located on opposite ends of the rails 40, 42. The cross bars 46 are held in a spaced relationship relative to the track base 44 by a track riser 48. A track end piece 50 is assembled to the end of the track base 44 to close off and finish the ends of the track base 44. A pivot stub shaft 52 is secured to the top of the support deck 20 and is received in a split pivot block 56. The split pivot block 56 is assembled to the bottom of the track base 44. The boom 14 pivots on the pivot stub shaft 52 within the split pivot block 56. An adjustment knob 58 is secured to a lock rod 60 that extends through a hole 62 in the track end piece 50 and also to the split pivot block 56. The adjustment knob 58 is rotated to tighten or loosen the split pivot block 56 on the pivot stub shaft 52. The adjustment knob 58 is used to loosen the clamping force applied by the split pivot block 56 to the stub shaft 52 to allow the boom 14 to be moved from a cross-cut position through a full range of miter positions.
Referring to
Referring to
Referring to
Referring again to
Referring to
Referring to
Referring to
While embodiments of the invention have been illustrated and described, it is not intended that these embodiments illustrate and describe all possible forms of the invention. Rather, the words used in the specification are words of description rather than limitation. It is understood that various changes may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.