Warranty

16
4. Shift either end of the fence as needed to
gain identical distance from table top.
5. Tighten both screws in the rear rail using a
10mm wrench.
Installing Front Rail and Rip Fence
Refer to Figures 26 through 29.
1. Install front rail (E, Figure 26) to the main
table using two M6x20 hex cap screws
(HP4-L), two 1/4" lock washers (HP4-M) and
two 1/4" flat washers (HP4-N). Finger
tighten only at this time.
2. Install guide rail (B, Figure 27) to the slots in
the front rail using three M6x20 hex cap
screws (HP4-L), three 1/4" lock washers
(HP4-M) and three 1/4" flat washers (HP4-
N). Tighten with a 10mm wrench.
3. Lift up the fence handle and hook the fence
assembly over the rear rail, and onto the
guide rail, as shown in Figure 28. The
sliding pad (Figure 29) should ride along the
top of the rear rail. To adjust, loosen hex nut
and rotate sliding pad as needed. Retighten
hex nut.
4. Push handle all the way down to lock fence
to guide rail. Raise handle to slide fence
assembly along table.
Setting Fence-to-Table Gap
The gap between the bottom of the rip fence
and the table top should be high enough that the
fence will not scrape along the table, yet low
enough that thin workpieces won’t slip beneath
it. The gap should be equal along the length of
the fence. Adjust as follows:
Refer to Figures 29 and 30.
1. Lock the fence assembly to the front rail by
pushing the fence handle down. The front
rail screws should still have “play” in them.
2. Lift up on both guide rail and fence together
until the fence/table gap at the front edge of
the table is acceptable.
3. Tighten both screws on the front rail (HP4-L,
Figure 26) with a 10mm wrench.
4. Adjust the height of the sliding pad at the
rear of the fence (Figure 29) if further
adjustment is needed to even the gap along
the length of the fence.
Figure 27
Figure 28
Figure 29
Figure 30