Well I am on my 3rd woodslicer, one blade I used on a 10" craftsman, the other on a 14" grizzly, both with great results. I have not had any trouble finding the drift and then compensating the fence to the blade drift on either, and after that, I usually get great cutting results, usually almost glue-able quality cut, with very little sanding needed. I ordered a second woodslicer for the my 14" grizzly, (my old one I have been using probably everyday since this spring, it is dulllll.....) for cutting up some hickory into backings mostly. I needed a new one anyway though. But man, I cannot find the drift for nothing. I have cut a bunch of mdf and boards, following the lines, setting my fence, etc, and it just ain't working. I mean, it is like I get a different angle every time I cut a line to check the angle. It is not consistent. I only recently started using a bandsaw this year, so I am still novice and all, just as a heads up. I have never had my wheels perfectly aligned, I have had them as close as I could get though. I am not super sure still how to properly tension a blade. I usually use the indicator nut as a guide, and if it is walking around as it cuts or something I will increase the tension a bit, etc. I am pretty sure I got my roller guides good too. I don't set them with a dollar bill like most people do. It don't work on these guides, when you try it, the tightening of the nut to tighten the roller guide in place actually moves the roller guide, so when I try to set it with a dollar, it always comes out way to tight, I mean the blade will not even move it is so tight. I always thought I should buy some better guides, but I never really knew which ones to buy. I don't know if I should try to tune the whole thing up all over again, or what. The main thing that is killing me, is how on earth does the blade drift keep changing every time I follow a line on a board to find the blade drift!. I've been messing with it all yesterday, and all today. Man. No matter what I do, I still get crappy cut quality it seems as well.