Popular Woodworking 2001-02 № 120, страница 63

Popular Woodworking 2001-02 № 120, страница 63

The right cabinet top has a cut-out for a router, letting the saw stand double as a router table. For routing operations, I bolt a router table fence to the saw fence (right).

3/4" wd x 3/8" dp rabbets and dadoes

Box Joinery Detail

wood make fine doors.

The drawers slide on fixed plywood shelves or wood strips mounted to the sides of the boxes — no hardware required. Each drawer is a small box, assembled with rabbets, dadoes and grooves. The drawer faces are made to cover the front edges of the boxes, just like the doors.

The only joinery in this project that requires any real finesse is where the cabinet tops join the saw and the cabinet. I recycled the hardware that secured the saw's extension wings to attach the cabinet tops to the table saw. Where the tops joined the boxes, I attached cleats to the undersides, positioned the tops over the boxes, and drilled bolt holes through the box parts and the cleats. After removing

The bolts that hold the cabinet tops to the cabinet pass through slotted holes.This lets you adjust the tops dead even with the saw table (right).

the tops, I enlarged the holes in the boxes to make vertical slots. The slots let me adjust the tops a fraction of an inch so I can get them perfectly level with the work surface of the table saw. The 3" diameter access holes in the top of the right box let me reach the bolts when I perform this adjustment. PW

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