

The choices available to you on the CPO Sites regarding the collection and use of your information.The circumstances under which CPO may disclose information gathered on the CPO Sites to third parties.The types of information we collect on the CPO Sites.How we collect information on the CPO Sites.CPO is the owner or authorized user of the content displayed on the CPO Sites.ĬPO has adopted this privacy policy to inform you of the following: They are rated to support 330lbs each, so more than enough for my ~660lbs saw and a mobile base.CPO Commerce, LLC ("CPO") operates the websites located at and other websites on which a copy of this privacy policy appears (cumulatively the "CPO Sites") as a service to its customers residing in the United States of America, its territories and possessions. Here is a video from "HalfInchShy" on the casters I have. Just throwing it out to people to see if anyone has experience with such things.Īnd yes the casters are locking/leveling. I'm certainly not trying to argue with you. I have a work table that I build for my shop where I used 2 layers of MDF for the top (glued and screwed together) and I'm not sure I could bust it with a sledge hammer. But, if I don't really care about weight, and I just want easy/strong, then I would think that approx 2.25 *inches* of MDF would be incredibly strong. In other words, the are lighter than a sold structure yet just as strong. But, one of their advantages (as I understand it) is strength-to-weight ratio. I also have back issues but don't find the short time at the TS a problem, I do have a taller bench and work tables though. Probably 3/4".Īre all the casters locking? There is a lot of force placed on the saw when in use. I would be inclined to use poplar as the torsion grid and skin with plywood. Well, I believe that over the span you are looking at and with the weight of the saw, it will bow with just 3 layers of mdf.
