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Prometheus
 
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I'm looking for a head-to-head comparison of Grizzly and Delta
contractor or hybrid style table saws. I'm looking to spend $500-$800
on a new saw sometime in the next month, and am currently in the
information gathering phase. I've got the Grizzly catalog, but the
Delta information is a little harder to come by, considering that they
don't list prices on their website, and the authorized Delta dealer
that carries what I'm looking for is closed whenever I have time to
contact them.

My main points of interest for the new saw are that it is 1.5 hp or
better (preferably 2 or 3 hp) single-phase (220 or 110 doesn't really
matter) takes a standard Dado set, has a good fence, and uses an
easily availible zero-clearance insert. I was looking at cabinet
saws, but decided that the extra $300-400 could be better applied
towards good jointer and dust collector (for those of you who were
going to suggest that I go one step up)

Does anyone have a link to a point-by-point comparison between the two
brands, or some personal experience with these saws that you'd be
willing to share? This is a big investment for me, so I want to make
sure I don't get burned.

Thanks!


Aut inveniam viam aut faciam
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Good luck and happy saw hunting...this is a a fun time for you..take
your time and buy the right saw for YOU...I have used and sold Delta
equipment for years. I am a big fan of Delta. Delta has always
impowered me to take good care of my customer. I have had 1000's of
experiences with Delta and the customer was always treated fairly. I
would recomend a USA made Delta contractor saw with a Beisemeyer 30"
fence. This package normally sells for around $800.00. This saw, in
my opinion has everything right with it for a serious home saw. The
motor has plenty of power and the Beisemeyer fence is the best. This
saw holds it value very well if you every decide to move up to a
cabinet saw. Buy American when you can. Good luck!
Mike

  #3   Report Post  
Edwin Pawlowski
 
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"Prometheus" wrote in message

I've got the Grizzly catalog, but the
Delta information is a little harder to come by, considering that they
don't list prices on their website, and the authorized Delta dealer
that carries what I'm looking for is closed whenever I have time to
contact them.


There are a dozen places that list prices. www.coastaltools.com amazon.com
woodcraft, etc. They will be farily close to your local dealer.



My main points of interest for the new saw are that it is 1.5 hp or
better (preferably 2 or 3 hp) single-phase (220 or 110 doesn't really
matter)


The Delta has 2 hp with the 220 volt windings.


takes a standard Dado set, has a good fence, and uses an
easily availible zero-clearance insert.


Most good saws will. You can easily make inserts from 1/2" MDF at a cost of
about 50¢ each.

I was looking at cabinet
saws, but decided that the extra $300-400 could be better applied
towards good jointer and dust collector (for those of you who were
going to suggest that I go one step up)


As a hobbiest woodworker, I agree.


Does anyone have a link to a point-by-point comparison between the two
brands, or some personal experience with these saws that you'd be
willing to share?


I have a Delta with the Biesemeyer fence. It does everything I ask. Be
sure to buy a good blade for it. I bought a 40T combo and dado from Ridge
Carbide Tools. If I was buying again, knowing what I now know, I'd by the
same setup.
Ed


  #4   Report Post  
Woodchuck34
 
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I just picked up my contractor saw last night. I did extensive
research, but obviously was looking for things that fit my needs.
Ended up with the Delta 36-682xl because I wanted a 50" Biesemeyer
Fence. I was also considering the Jets, Powermatic, and DeWalt
(briefly). A sales rep at my local Woodcraft spent about 30 minutes
discussing the pro and cons of the different manufacturers and models.
He said the big difference between the Deltas and the others is the
motor, which have 2 capacitors and are made in the US.

Came real close to pulling the trigger on a General, but there are no
local dealers so I couldn't look at one in the flesh and the shipping
costs steered me away. Third was a Powermatic on amazon.com, but after
seeing their fences, just felt better with the Biesemeyer.

I still have a spreadsheet put together that compares the pros and cons
I was contemplating, as well as where I could get the best prices
online, although I did end up buying mine from the local Woodcraft.
Email me and I'll send you a copy if you want it.

  #5   Report Post  
Woodchuck34
 
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www.toolseeker.com is a good shopping bot.



  #6   Report Post  
Olebiker
 
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Interesting that you mentioned not having a General dealer in your
area. I was in Clearwater, Florida a couple of days ago and noticed
that the Woodcraft there carries General.

I have had my Jet contractor's saw for a few years and, after putting a
link belt on it, have found it to be a dandy. I am saving my nickels
and dimes for a Mule fence for it. They make a router fence that
attaches to their table saw fence and, since I have my router in the
right extension of my table saw That sounds like a pretty good setup.

Dick Durbin
Tallahassee

  #7   Report Post  
Rick Cox
 
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It is probabally more than you want to spend, but....
I am a hobbyist that has had a craftsman 10 contractors saw since 94. (IMO
Great saw, gave it to my dad and still use it regularly) I wanted to upgrade
to a saw that has better dust collection and looked at the hybrid saws.
Once I was in the $800 range, I figured that if i wanted to upgrade to a
better saw again, I may only get $400 for the saw. That being said, I am
going to loose $400 now or later. I decided to jump in and make this my
last table saw purchase and got a Delta Unisaw from a local woodworking shop
for $1249.00 (Buy once and cry once as quoted many times). My wife helped
me over the edge for my Christmas gift. I picked it up the day after
Christmas and ironically did not have power at my house for 4 more days.

Once I finally got to turn it on all regrets and worries went away.
I love it.



  #8   Report Post  
hikinandbikin
 
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Rick Cox wrote:
I decided to jump in and make this my
last table saw purchase and got a Delta Unisaw from a local

woodworking shop
for $1249.00 (Buy once and cry once as quoted many times).


I did roughly the same thing. found a PM66 with about 10 pretty decent
blades, a 8x8 outfeed table and a large sled. Got mine from a small
local guy that made cabinets (he was getting out of private business
after a heart attack). I payed 1100 and he threw in a PC lam trimmer.
Bang for your buck this could not be beat. given the saw came with so
many extras it would have cost me nearly a $500 more if I had bought
the blades, sled and table seperately.
W

  #9   Report Post  
Ken
 
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Call "Woodcraft" they'll give you all the prices you want.
Don't over look General International.

KK



"Prometheus" wrote in message
...
I'm looking for a head-to-head comparison of Grizzly and Delta
contractor or hybrid style table saws. I'm looking to spend $500-$800
on a new saw sometime in the next month, and am currently in the
information gathering phase. I've got the Grizzly catalog, but the
Delta information is a little harder to come by, considering that they
don't list prices on their website, and the authorized Delta dealer
that carries what I'm looking for is closed whenever I have time to
contact them.

My main points of interest for the new saw are that it is 1.5 hp or
better (preferably 2 or 3 hp) single-phase (220 or 110 doesn't really
matter) takes a standard Dado set, has a good fence, and uses an
easily availible zero-clearance insert. I was looking at cabinet
saws, but decided that the extra $300-400 could be better applied
towards good jointer and dust collector (for those of you who were
going to suggest that I go one step up)

Does anyone have a link to a point-by-point comparison between the two
brands, or some personal experience with these saws that you'd be
willing to share? This is a big investment for me, so I want to make
sure I don't get burned.

Thanks!


Aut inveniam viam aut faciam



  #10   Report Post  
Mike C
 
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I spent a good amount of time comparing Grizzly, Delta, Jet and other
contractor grade table saws. I wanted to spend about what you're
considering. For me, it came down to the Grizzly G0576 and the Delta
36-681. The price for the two is within $50. I decided on the Grizzly
becuase it included two cast iron wings, is left tilt and has a 2hp
motor.

I've had this saw for a couple months and am very pleased with it's
performance. The Delta has in it's favor the Unifence, which is better
than the Shop Fox Alumiclassic. I was however, pleasantly surprised at
the performance of the shop fox fence. It really does work well. The
way I see it, I've got a great saw for the money!

Enjoy picking your saw!

--Mike



  #12   Report Post  
Prometheus
 
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There are a dozen places that list prices. www.coastaltools.com amazon.com
woodcraft, etc. They will be farily close to your local dealer.


I did actually make it into the local dealer, and it looks like
they've got a price that is essentially identical to the comparable
Grizzly, with the same features. The only things I was a little leery
of were the plastic locking knobs on the adjustment handles, and a
slightly rough edge on the cast iron table. So far, it's looking like
Delta is probably going to win simply because I can go and get the
thing and don't have to take a day off from work to wait for a truck
driver to deliver it.

takes a standard Dado set, has a good fence, and uses an
easily availible zero-clearance insert.


Most good saws will. You can easily make inserts from 1/2" MDF at a cost of
about 50¢ each.


So neither brand uses a proprietary set of accessories? I was a
little worried about Delta's trick of using odd sizes on their
shopmaster line.

I have a Delta with the Biesemeyer fence. It does everything I ask. Be
sure to buy a good blade for it. I bought a 40T combo and dado from Ridge
Carbide Tools. If I was buying again, knowing what I now know, I'd by the
same setup.


I should be ok on that front- I've got a 60T Freud Industrial with the
triple-chip toothset and an 80T Freud Diablo on my current saws, and I
don't intend to every buy a cheap blade again, after seeing the
difference.
Aut inveniam viam aut faciam
  #13   Report Post  
Prometheus
 
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On Fri, 01 Apr 2005 18:29:30 GMT, "Rick Cox" wrote:

It is probabally more than you want to spend, but....
I am a hobbyist that has had a craftsman 10 contractors saw since 94. (IMO
Great saw, gave it to my dad and still use it regularly) I wanted to upgrade
to a saw that has better dust collection and looked at the hybrid saws.
Once I was in the $800 range, I figured that if i wanted to upgrade to a
better saw again, I may only get $400 for the saw. That being said, I am
going to loose $400 now or later. I decided to jump in and make this my
last table saw purchase and got a Delta Unisaw from a local woodworking shop
for $1249.00 (Buy once and cry once as quoted many times). My wife helped
me over the edge for my Christmas gift. I picked it up the day after
Christmas and ironically did not have power at my house for 4 more days.


I really did consider this option very carefully, but I did have an
opportunity to try out a pair of Unisaws in a shop, and I honestly did
not see that they were $400-800 better than a contractor-style saw.
That isn't to say that they aren't really nice- but I'm not depending
on this particular saw to make my living, and I think I can retrofit a
dust-collection system for it that will add some of the lost weight
and work almost as well as a factory-made cabinet.

The issue isn't the money- if all I wanted was the saw, I could get
the Unisaw, or even one of the 5hp Grizzlies by the end of the summer-
but there are several other big hunks of metal I'd like to get as
well, where going a step up may be more noticable than it is with the
saw. (An 8" jointer as opposed to a 6", for instance- considering
most of the stock I buy is 7.5"-8" wide, it's going to make a whole
lot more sense for me to put some of that table saw money into the
jointer upgrade.)

Ahh, the joy of calculating opportunity costs....

Once I finally got to turn it on all regrets and worries went away.
I love it.



Aut inveniam viam aut faciam
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Prometheus
 
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On 1 Apr 2005 15:39:08 -0800, "Mike C" wrote:

I spent a good amount of time comparing Grizzly, Delta, Jet and other
contractor grade table saws. I wanted to spend about what you're
considering. For me, it came down to the Grizzly G0576 and the Delta
36-681. The price for the two is within $50. I decided on the Grizzly
becuase it included two cast iron wings, is left tilt and has a 2hp
motor.


Now here's something I've been mulling over a little. I haven't
broken many parts on any of my tools, but the few that have broken
have always been cast iron- I've never had a steel part fail, whether
it is machined or stamped. It seems like maybe cast iron isn't all
it's cracked up to be- why is it always considered such an upgrade?
You can't fix it without a special welder and some really excellent
welding skills- and even then it usually doesn't work. Steel, OTHO,
you can just weld back together and grind flat.

This isn't *just* a gripe about cast iron- there are probably some
things that I am not aware when it comes to the material. It just
always seems to be the component that fails. Anyone have any thoughts
on why cast parts are superior?

I've had this saw for a couple months and am very pleased with it's
performance. The Delta has in it's favor the Unifence, which is better
than the Shop Fox Alumiclassic. I was however, pleasantly surprised at
the performance of the shop fox fence. It really does work well. The
way I see it, I've got a great saw for the money!


How was your delivery experience with Grizzly? That's the main
downside I see to their company, but it may be a useless concern.

Enjoy picking your saw!


--Mike


Aut inveniam viam aut faciam
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Edwin Pawlowski
 
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"Prometheus" wrote in message
I really did consider this option very carefully, but I did have an
opportunity to try out a pair of Unisaws in a shop, and I honestly did
not see that they were $400-800 better than a contractor-style saw.
That isn't to say that they aren't really nice- but I'm not depending
on this particular saw to make my living, and I think I can retrofit a
dust-collection system for it that will add some of the lost weight
and work almost as well as a factory-made cabinet.



The cabinet saw is the choice for cutting 12/4 maple all day long. Since I
don't, I opted for the con tractor's saw.

Delta has (or had?) an accessory to help with dust collection, but I cannot
find it on their web page. It is a molded plastic bottom with outlet for a
4" hose. It is easiest installed when assembling the saw so check it out
when you buy.

--
Ed
http://pages.cthome.net/edhome/




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Patriarch
 
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Prometheus wrote in
:


There are a dozen places that list prices. www.coastaltools.com
amazon.com woodcraft, etc. They will be farily close to your local
dealer.


I did actually make it into the local dealer, and it looks like
they've got a price that is essentially identical to the comparable
Grizzly, with the same features. The only things I was a little leery
of were the plastic locking knobs on the adjustment handles, and a
slightly rough edge on the cast iron table. So far, it's looking like
Delta is probably going to win simply because I can go and get the
thing and don't have to take a day off from work to wait for a truck
driver to deliver it.


The local dealer can be an even better deal, when something isn't clear, or
hasn't been packed with the shipment, or similar. And shipping damage, if
it were to happen, is generally speaking, someone else's problem.

What I liked was being able to touch the tools, and look at the build
quality. And to schedule the whole 'bringing it home' thing.

BTW, it takes three neighbors and a portable engine hoist to get a Unisaw
out of the back of a GMC halfton pickup bed safely. And everybody got to
play with the new toys.

Have fun with your new tools.

Patriarch
  #17   Report Post  
Pat Barber
 
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No.. Unisaws are still built here but the parts "might"
be from "other" places...

Of course that's subject to change within 24 hours.


Prometheus wrote:

On 1 Apr 2005 06:07:55 -0800, wrote:


I generally do make an effort to buy American, but I was under the
impression that Delta had moved most or all of thier manufacturing to
Asia. Which models are still made in the US?


  #18   Report Post  
Mike C
 
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You make some good points about the cast extension wings. Personally I
went with cast wings because they're heavier (less vibration) and make
for a nice flat surface. I'm not too worried about damaging them.

The delivery experience wasn't bad at all. I had the saw in just 4
days. How log it takes of course depends on your location in relation
to one of their warehouses. The saw was pretty easy to get off the
truck, and the driver did help out contrary to what they told me. It
would have been easier if the truck had a ramp, but these guys usually
deliver to businesses with loading docks. If you go this route (or
order anything freight), you definitely want a buddy there to help and
want to note any damage to the boxes on the delivery slip.

--Mike

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Prometheus
 
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On Mon, 04 Apr 2005 00:38:09 -0500, Patriarch
wrote:

The local dealer can be an even better deal, when something isn't clear, or
hasn't been packed with the shipment, or similar. And shipping damage, if
it were to happen, is generally speaking, someone else's problem.

What I liked was being able to touch the tools, and look at the build
quality. And to schedule the whole 'bringing it home' thing.

BTW, it takes three neighbors and a portable engine hoist to get a Unisaw
out of the back of a GMC halfton pickup bed safely. And everybody got to
play with the new toys.

Have fun with your new tools.


I will... someday, anyhow. The downside to the new goodies is that I
can get them because I'm on 15-20 hours of manditory overtime a week
at work right now. Still haven't even turned the new PC691 on yet...
On the bright side- when things slow down, I'm going to have an
entirely new shop, plus another 1500 hours of sawing experience to
bring to bear in it. It'll be good.

Patriarch


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