Tables pretty light duty what I would do is put it between two sawhorses and stand on it. You have to jump on a little bit. That should straighten it out unless you have a press.
Designing and building for 50 years
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On Mar 28, 2025, at 1:30?PM, df.stone via groups.io <df.stone@...> wrote:
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I have the same sliding table, though on a K3. I have never attempted to measure how flat the sliding aluminum table is along its length--which is what you're referencing, if I understand correctly. But I would not be surprised if mine had that amount of deviation, just given the overall realities of the machine. I can't really envision a fix, but also can't really see how a slight gradual uphill, especially one located only at the less used final part of the travel, would much matter in practice. (At least for the saw function; I know your machine has a shaper too that you perhaps use the table with.) I don't mean to fault you for doing the measurements, raising the issue and posing the question, of course, but is the uphill causing a problem?
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David?