The leg levelers were made from some kind of bracket that had been laying around in one of my drawers for years. I don't have a clue were they came from or what the went to but they looked like a heavy duty shelving bracket. I cut off the arms and drilled the one hole for the feet. Funny thing is that they were getting ready to be pitched. But you know how that goes as soon as you throw something out you need it. Or in this case I find out what they went to and be sorry I cut them up. Thanks for the comments.
To answer a few Questions. First going back to the adjustable feet there is a photo I added that has one of those brackets laying on the left side of the table. The table is quite heavy and doesn't move. There's nothing attaching it to the saw. On the side that faces the saw the edging on the face is a little taller to allow it to rest on an L bracket that comes off the back of the saw. Just enough to give me a 16th drop to the table. The dimensions are pretty much the same as the saw both width and diameter. It measures 63 1/2×32. Thanks all for your interest.
Alright dumb question but in an outfeed setup like that do you take off the rear fence rail and just run it on top of the out feed table? That's what the picture looks like. Thx
Alright dumb question but in an outfeed setup like that do you take off the rear fence rail and just run it on top of the out feed table? That s what the picture looks like. Thx
This saw has a fence that glides on the top of the saw. No rear rails needed. In the 3rd picture you see the back of the table saw, there is a large L bracket that looks to be a fence rail. This supports the wings across the back of the saw. The back of the outfeed table actually sets over top of that bracket. Also there is nothing that attatches the table to the saw. It just sets there. If you have a saw that has a rear fence guide you would have to leave a space between it and this type outfeed table for it to work.