48
ENGLISH
laboring.Hardness and toughness can vary even in the same 
piece of material, and knotty or damp sections can put a heavy 
load on the saw.When this happens, push the saw more slowly, 
but hard enough to keep working without much decrease 
in speed.Forcing the saw can cause rough cuts, inaccuracy, 
kickback, and over‑heating of the motor.Should your cut begin 
to go off the line, don’t try to force it back on.Release the switch 
and allow blade to come to a complete stop.Then you can 
withdraw the saw, sight anew, and start a new cut slightly inside 
the wrong one.In any event, withdraw the saw if you must shift 
the cut.Forcing a correction inside the cut can stall the saw and 
lead tokickback.
IF SAW STALLS, RELEASE THE TRIGGER AND BACK THE SAW 
UNTIL IT IS LOOSE.BE SURE BLADE IS STRAIGHT IN THE CUT AND 
CLEAR OF THE CUTTING EDGE BEFORERESTARTING.
As you finish a cut, release the trigger and allow the blade to 
stop before lifting the saw from the work.As you lift the saw, 
the spring‑tensioned telescoping guard will automatically close 
under the blade.Remember the blade is exposed until this 
occurs.Never reach under the work for any reason.When you 
have to retract the telescoping guard manually(as is necessary 
for starting pocket cuts) always use the retractinglever.
NOTE: When cutting thin strips, be careful to ensure that small 
cutoff pieces don’t hang up on inside of lowerguard.
Pocket Cutting(Fig.O)
 
WARNING: Never tie the blade guard in a raised 
position.Never move the saw backwards when pocket 
cutting.This may cause the unit to raise up off the work 
surface which could causeinjury.
A pocket cut is one that is made in a floor, wall or other 
flatsurface.
1.  Adjust the saw shoe so the blade cuts at desireddepth.
2.  Tilt the saw forward and rest front of the shoe on material 
to becut.
3.  Using the lower guard lever, retract lower blade guard to an 
upward position.Lower rear of shoe until blade teeth almost 
touch cuttingline.
4.  Release the blade guard(its contact with the work will keep 
it in position to open freely as you start the cut).Remove 
hand from guard lever and firmly grip auxiliary handle
12
, 
as shown in FigureO.Position your body and arm to allow 
you to resist kickback if itoccurs.
5.  Make sure blade is not in contact with cutting surface before 
startingsaw.
6.  Start the motor and gradually lower the saw until its shoe 
rests flat on the material to be cut.Advance saw along the 
cutting line until cut iscompleted.
7.  Release trigger and allow blade to stop completely before 
withdrawing the blade from thematerial.
8.  When starting each new cut, repeat asabove.
Dust Extraction (Fig. P–R)
 
WARNING: Risk of dust inhalation.To reduce the risk of 
personal injury, ALWAYS wear an approved dustmask.
 
WARNING: To reduce the risk of serious personal 
injury, ALWAYS hold securely in anticipation of a 
suddenreaction.
Proper hand position requires one hand on the main handle
25
, 
with the other hand on the auxiliary handle
12
.
LED Worklight (Fig. A)
The LED worklight
15
 is activated when the trigger switch is 
depressed.When the trigger is released, the worklight will stay 
illuminated for up to 20seconds.
NOTE: The worklight is for lighting the immediate work surface 
and is not intended to be used as aflashlight.
Switching On and Off (Fig. C)
For safety reasons the trigger switch
2
 of your tool is equipped 
with a lock‑off button
1
.
Press the lock‑off button to unlock thetool.
To run the tool, press the trigger switch
2
.As soon as the 
trigger switch is released, the lock‑off switch is automatically 
activated to prevent unintended starting of themachine.
NOTICE: Do not switch the tool ON or OFF when the saw 
blade touches the workpiece or othermaterials.
Workpiece Support (Fig. J–M)
 
 WARNING: To reduce the risk of serious personal 
injury, support the work properly and hold the saw 
firmly to prevent loss ofcontrol.
Figures J and K show proper sawing position.Figures L and M 
show an unsafe condition.Hands should be kept away from 
cuttingarea.
To avoid kickback, ALWAYS support board or panel NEAR the 
cut,(Fig.J and K).DON’T support board or panel away from the 
cut(Fig.L and M).
ALWAYS DISCONNECT BATTERY PACK BEFORE MAKING ANY 
ADJUST MENTS! Place the work with its “good” side—the one 
on which appearance is most important—down.The saw cuts 
upward, so any splintering will be on the work face that is up 
when you sawit.
Cutting (Fig. J, K, M)
 
WARNING: Never attempt to use this tool by resting it 
upside down on a work surface and bringing the material 
to the tool.Always securely clamp the workpiece and bring 
the tool to the workpiece, securely holding the tool with 
two hands as shown in FigureJ.
Place the wider portion of the saw shoe on that part of the 
workpiece which is solidly supported, not on the section 
that will fall off when the cut is made.As examples, FigureK 
illustrates the RIGHT way to cut off the end of a board.Always 
clamp work.Don’t try to hold short pieces by hand! Remember 
to support cantilevered and overhanging material.Use caution 
when sawing material frombelow.
Be sure saw is up to full speed before blade contacts material 
to be cut.Starting saw with blade against material to be cut 
or pushed forward into kerf can result in kickback.Push the 
saw forward at a speed which allows the blade to cut without