i don't like cutting lightweight substrates on a table saw. the saw inherently is trying to throw the sheet out. a featherboard can be used but still the blades energy is going the wrong direction. a track saw pulls the track and the saw together. if i'm cutting something down that has $500 in supplies and another $1000 in labor, there's no way i'm "pulling" that substrate through a tool! insane. place it on a table and safely trim. i can even cut 2" deep poplar plus .080 aluminum mounted to it at a 45 degree angle simlutaneously, no table saw or panel saw can do that.
putting acrylic in a table saw is a suicide mission compared to a track saw too. i print and mount my images to the acrylic (i have cross marks printed on the image) then just trim around print + acrylic. the idea of "print + substrate" is what makes the track saw better for sign making. when doing this kind of fabrication, the problem is not that the sheet needs 5/8" of an inch trimmed off the edge. the problem is with the image mounted or printed (even direct/flat bed printing the image is sometimes not fed perfectly) the sheet needs 5/8" at one end tapering to 3/4" at the other end. a table saw with its fence is not the right tool for knocking down this part. with the track saw, you just print your trim marks, mount that sucker to the substrate as decently as you can and place the track on the crosshairs. then cut. not only is the print perfect but the whole trimming issue goes by in a few minutes with no headaches. ...how about no "math" either. the stupidest help in the county can understand "put the edge of this thing, on the little black line, and cut".
cutting veneer, formica, petg, gatorfoam, on a table saw, bad idea. track saws can cut very delicate substrates like giant scissors.
a table saw is good for ripping pine for building backers, ripping pine for building backers... and ...uh. also ripping pine for building backers.
also, occasionally i won't have my van and i'll need some plywood or mdf for a project. so i go to lowe's or home depot and load the material, take it to the panel saw. they guy pulls each sheet in, and saws them up. it takes forever and the cuts are inferior. the way to do this is to set all the sheets on a table three or four thick, c-clamp the corners, and cut them all at once. one issue is when ripping on a table saw, the top part falls down onto the bottom part. on a track saw the part just lays there on the table perfectly parallel. i almost lose my mind standing around for 15 minutes while the guy twists the saw and loads and unloads the pieces. all to have the edges look like the were chewed off by a wolverine. i'm used to ZERO splinters and no saw marks at all on the edge. the cut part should look like it was sanded with 200 grit. the track saw delivers a perfect cut. a panel saw is good for hacking up luan for building crates, hacking up luan for building crates, and ....hacking up luan for building crates.