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#1
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Need a mitre saw, Some advice please
Thinking about getting a mitre saw to do all those repetitive cuts that
crop up from time to time. Several things I need to consider the first being cost. Idealy no more than £50 but you get what you pay for and I can go up to £100. Secondly size, This is because I live in a small flat with limited storage plus I like it to be easily portable. Adaptability, Because I'd like to make a portable workstaion for it. Finally some sort of dust collection system, either bag or just connecting it to the Henry shop vac. Seen some around at my local hardware superstore and online and I just need some advice as to what to go for. Many Thanks TR |
#2
Posted to rec.woodworking
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Need a mitre saw, Some advice please
Nothing at that price is going to be up to much. You seem to be in the UK,
so have a look at the top of the range Pro sliding mitre saw from B&Q. £100-ish IIRC. |
#3
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Need a mitre saw, Some advice please
"deadlock" nobody@nowhere_yes_its a_cliche.com wrote in message ... Nothing at that price is going to be up to much. well, nothing at that price will be very big or powerful or versatile so have a look at the top of the range Pro sliding mitre saw from B&Q. £100-ish IIRC. Or my preference would be http://www.axminster.co.uk/ I see a £50 budget gives you a choice of one, £100 a choice of three. You will want a sliding saw if you can get one. For most people a simple swivelling saw is sufficient and the tilting (compound mitre) function is unecessary. Tim W |
#4
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Need a mitre saw, Some advice please
"TrailRat" wrote in message ups.com... Thinking about getting a mitre saw to do all those repetitive cuts that crop up from time to time. Several things I need to consider the first being cost. Idealy no more than £50 but you get what you pay for and I can go up to £100. Secondly size, This is because I live in a small flat with limited storage plus I like it to be easily portable. Adaptability, Because I'd like to make a portable workstaion for it. Finally some sort of dust collection system, either bag or just connecting it to the Henry shop vac. Seen some around at my local hardware superstore and online and I just need some advice as to what to go for. Many Thanks TR There is something to be said for starting with a basic saw and seeing how your needs develop. You may never need the sliding capabilities. I, for one, waited until I could afford the saw that "I really wanted" with "everything I need". Guess what? Thirty years passed and I now have grandkids and I'm just starting to get my shop together. I made do with a Shopsmith multi-purpose machine through all of those years but I sure lost a lot of time and experience. Buy a quality, low feature saw and you will be better off than buying some off-brand with more features but it may not hold square. Good luck! |
#5
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Need a mitre saw, Some advice please
Don't know if DeWalt is available to you but I bought a 10 inch basic
mitre saw about two years ago and have been extremely happy with it. No laser or slinding feature but I have not needed either. It has a dust collection bag, and a brake that engages as soon as you let up off the trigger. And it cuts like a breeze. I carry mine back and forth from it's storage shelf to a work table and it is pretty easy. Good luck and enjoy the new saw. Ron T |
#6
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Need a mitre saw, Some advice please
Hi Ron,
DeWalt is available to me. Do you happen to have the model? TR |
#7
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Need a mitre saw, Some advice please
Save your money. Get a SEARS chopsaw. You only need the sliding version if
you are chopping large 5"+ boards. Or you can go for the 12" model to cover up to 2x6" As with any tool decision, your reason(s) for the purchase impact upon the recommended choice. Although referred to as Miter Saws, they are not the best for fine miters (picture framing, etc.) . "TrailRat" wrote in message oups.com... Hi Ron, DeWalt is available to me. Do you happen to have the model? TR |
#8
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Need a mitre saw, Some advice please
TrailRat wrote:
Thinking about getting a mitre saw to do all those repetitive cuts that crop up from time to time. Several things I need to consider the first being cost. Idealy no more than £50 but you get what you pay for and I can go up to £100. Secondly size, This is because I live in a small flat with limited storage plus I like it to be easily portable. Adaptability, Because I'd like to make a portable workstaion for it. Finally some sort of dust collection system, either bag or just connecting it to the Henry shop vac. Seen some around at my local hardware superstore and online and I just need some advice as to what to go for. Many Thanks TR my little delta 250 10" was $100USD, and it's done ok, it's limited, but the price was right, and it's lite enough to move easally. I wouldn't go any smaller then a 10" also get the compound mitter vs just a mitter saw. -- if corn oil comes from corn, and olive oil comes from olives where dose baby oil come from? |
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