Milwaukee V28 User Manual

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1.  DANGER!: 
 
Keep hands away from cutting area 
and blade. Keep your second hand 
on auxiliary handle or motor housing.
 
If both hands are holding the saw, they 
cannot be cut by the blade.
 
Do not reach underneath the work-
piece.
 The guard cannot protect you 
from the blade below the workpiece.
 
Adjust the cutting depth to the thick-
ness of the workpiece. 
Less than a full 
tooth of the blade teeth should be visible 
below the workpiece.
 
NEVER hold piece being cut in your 
hands or across your leg. Secure the 
workpiece to a stable platform. 
It is 
important to support the work properly to 
minimize body exposure, blade binding, 
or loss of control.
 
Hold power tool by insulated grip-
ping surfaces when performing an 
operation where the cutting tool may 
contact hidden wiring or its own cord.
 
Contact with a “live” wire will also make 
exposed metal parts of the tool “live” and 
shock the operator.
 
When ripping always use a rip fence 
or straight edge guide.
 This improves 
the accuracy of cut and reduces the 
chance of blade binding.
 
Always use blades with correct size 
and shape (diamond versus round) of 
arbor holes.
 Blades that do not match 
the mounting hardware of the saw will 
run eccentrically, causing loss of con-
trol.
 
Never use damaged or incorrect blade 
washers or bolts.
 The blade washers 
and bolts were specially designed for 
your saw, for optimum performance and 
safety of operation.
2.  Causes and Operator Prevention of 
KICKBACK:
 
KICKBACK is a sudden reaction to 
a pinched, bound or misaligned saw 
blade, causing an uncontrolled saw to 
lift up and out of the workpiece toward 
the operator.
SPECIFIC SAFETY RULES — CIRCULAR SAWS
 
Blade depth and bevel adjusting lock-
ing levers must be tight and secure 
before making cut.
 If blade adjustment 
shifts while cutting, it may cause binding 
and kickback.
 
Use extra caution when making a 
"plunge cut" (or pocket cut) into 
existing walls or other blind areas.
 
The protruding blade may cut objects 
that can cause kickback.
3.  Check lower guard for proper closing 
before each use. Do not operate saw 
if lower guard does not move freely 
and close instantly. Never clamp or 
tie the lower guard into the open po-
sition.
 If saw is accidentally dropped, 
lower guard may be bent. Raise the 
lower guard with the lower guard lever 
and make sure it moves freely and does 
not touch the blade or any other part, in 
all angles and depths of cut.
 
Check the operation of the lower 
guard spring. If the guard and the 
spring are not operating properly, 
they must be serviced before use.
 
Lower guard may operate sluggishly due 
to damaged parts, gummy deposits, or 
a buildup of debris.
 
Lower guard should be retracted 
manually only for special cuts such 
as "plunge cuts" ("pocket cuts") and 
"compound cuts". Raise lower guard 
by lower guard lever and as soon as 
blade enters the material, the lower 
guard must be released.
 For all other 
sawing, the lower guard should operate 
automatically.
Depth of Cut
at 45°
0 to 1-9/16"
Blade
Size
6-1/2"
Cat.
No.
0730-20
Depth of Cut
At 90°
0 to 2-1/8"
Arbor
5/8"
No Load
RPM
4200
Volts
DC
28
Specifi cations
Symbology
Volts Direct Current
No Load Revolutions 
per Minute (RPM)
Underwriters Laboratories, Inc., 
United States and Canada
 
When the blade is pinched or bound 
tightly by the kerf closing down, the 
blade stalls and the motor reaction 
drives the unit rapidly back toward the 
operator.
 
If the blade becomes twisted or mis-
aligned in the cut, the teeth at the back 
edge of the blade can dig into the top 
surface of the wood causing the blade 
to climb out of the kerf and jump back 
toward operator.
 
KICKBACK is the result of saw misuse 
and/or incorrect operating procedures or 
conditions and can be avoided by taking 
proper precautions as given below:
 Maintain 
fi rm grip with both hands 
on the saw and position your arms to 
resist kickback forces.
 Position your 
body to either side of the blade, but not 
in line with the blade. Kickback could 
cause the saw to jumb backwards, but 
kickback forces can be controlled by 
the operator, if proper precautions are 
taken.
 
When blade is binding, or when inter-
rupting a cut for any reason, release 
the trigger and hold the saw motion-
less in the material until the blade 
comes to a complete stop. Never 
attempt to remove the saw from the 
work or pull the saw backward while 
the blade is in motion or kickback 
may occur.
 Investigate and take cor-
rective actions to eliminate the cause 
of blade binding.
 
When restarting a saw in the work-
piece, center the saw blade in the kerf 
and check that saw teeth are not en-
gaged into the material.
 If saw blade is 
binding, it may walk up or kickback from 
the workpiece as the saw is restarted.
 
Support large panels to minimize the 
risk of blade pinching and kickback.
 
Large panels tend to sag under their 
own weight. Supports must be placed 
under the panel on both sides, near 
the line of cut and near the edge of the 
panel.
 
Do not use dull or damaged blade. 
Unsharpened or improperly set blades 
produce narrow kerf causing excessive 
friction, blade binding and kickback.
 
Always observe that the lower guard 
is covering the blade before plac-
ing saw down on bench or fl oor.
 An 
unprotected, coasting blade will cause 
the saw to walk backwards, cutting 
whatever is in its path. Be aware of the 
time it takes for the blade to stop after 
switch is released.
4.  Maintain labels and nameplates. 
These carry important information. 
If unreadable or missing, contact a 
MILWAUKEE
 service facility for a free 
replacement. 
5.  WARNING! Some dust created by 
power sanding, sawing, grinding, drill-
ing, and other construction activities 
contains chemicals known to cause 
cancer, birth defects or other reproduc-
tive harm. Some examples of these 
chemicals are:
 
• lead from lead-based paint
 
• crystalline silica from bricks and 
cement and other masonry products, 
and
 
• arsenic and chromium from chemi-
cally-treated lumber.
 
Your risk from these exposures varies, 
depending on how often you do this 
type of work. To reduce your exposure 
to these chemicals: work in a well ven-
tilated area, and work with approved 
safety equipment, such as those dust 
masks that are specially designed to 
fi lter out microscopic particles.