Tom-
I know. It had me roped in when I saw the tree on the band saw table.
I ran across it because I am looking for a bandsaw for cutting lams, bows, and other stuff.
Warden -
the Grizzly gets fairly high marks. And it seems to always win the biggest bang-for-the-buck category. Likely you just need to study up on blade drift. Here is something I grabbed from another article though the above article talks about it too
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Blade Drift
No matter how carefully set a band saw's guides are, the blade still tends to run out of square to the table. This is called drift or lead. When following a line and cutting freehand, you compensate for this without really thinking about it, but it's not so simple when ripping or re-sawing: the stock being cut must remain in line with the blade. A fence, set so it parallels the true path of the blade, ensures cuts remain true.
Here's how I line up a fence: On a plywood scrap about 4 inches wide and 24 inches long, strike a pencil line down the center parallel to a machine edge. Use the band saw to carefully cut halfway down the line. Stop the saw but don't move the scrap–not even a little. The plywood is probably not at a right angle to the table. Make a light pencil mark along the machine edge of the plywood. Then, clamp or adjust your fence parallel to the line, which is also parallel to the blade path. Each time you change blades, re-establish the line.
– Bill Thomas
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Enjoy!