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#1
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Hi Guys,
I'm interested in hearing the wreck's opinion on 10/12" sliding compound miter saw. My criteria areas a 1) Easy depth of cut setting - I'm thinking I would be able to plow out dado's with multiple passes on a long board easier than a dado head on the table saw. 2) accurate miter/bevel stops. 3) either a high tooth count blade from factory or a lower price to offset the cost of buying a higher price. 3) laser would be a plus...but again a lower price offset to buy a laserKerf if not included. 4) EZ blade change 5) replacable zero clearance insert. Of course quality and longevity. Thanks Mark |
#2
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Simple, you need a DeWalt RAS.
-- Rumpty Radial Arm Saw Forum: http://forums.delphiforums.com/woodbutcher/start - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - "Mark" wrote in message om... Hi Guys, I'm interested in hearing the wreck's opinion on 10/12" sliding compound miter saw. My criteria areas a 1) Easy depth of cut setting - I'm thinking I would be able to plow out dado's with multiple passes on a long board easier than a dado head on the table saw. 2) accurate miter/bevel stops. 3) either a high tooth count blade from factory or a lower price to offset the cost of buying a higher price. 3) laser would be a plus...but again a lower price offset to buy a laserKerf if not included. 4) EZ blade change 5) replacable zero clearance insert. Of course quality and longevity. Thanks Mark |
#3
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Mark wrote:
Hi Guys, I'm interested in hearing the wreck's opinion on 10/12" sliding compound miter saw. My criteria areas a 1) Easy depth of cut setting - I'm thinking I would be able to plow out dado's with multiple passes on a long board easier than a dado head on the table saw. None of the SCMS I'm aware of have accurate depth of cut stops. That's more of a radial arm saw feature. And I wouldn't want to put any kind of dado blade in a SCMS. Nibbling a dado doesn't produce a flat bottom well 2) accurate miter/bevel stops. You do have what you need to check for the accuracy you want right? A "simple" compound miter saw might be more appropriate if you want to do really accurate angles etc. but s SCMS will probably give you adequate results - if you take the time to set it up right. 3) either a high tooth count blade from factory or a lower price to offset the cost of buying a higher price. The Makita 1212 came with a fairly good blade with high tooth count. 3) [ probably meant 4) laser would be a plus...but again a lower price offset to buy a laserKerf if not included. Laser will get you just "close". Skip the gimmick 4) [5?] EZ blade change Most of the major brand SCMS are easy 5) [6?] replacable zero clearance insert. Most of the SCMS come with plastic replaceable inserts The Makita has a pair of adjustable pieces that you can set to whatever blade width you want. Of course quality and longevity. Let's see. I recall my working days mantra - "You want Fast, Good and Cheap - pick two." You've defined conflicting criteria. Pry open the wallet and pay for the features you need. The Makita 1212 comes to about $900 when all the fence height extensions and hold downs/hold ins have been added. Through in another $100 plus for some infeed and outfeed tables and you're almost done. Add another hundred or so for "mircro adjustable" flip stops, a pair for flat ends and a pair for mitered ends and you're close to a low end Unisaw. But it'll be a work horse and, with proper care, do a good job for a long time. Thanks Mark If you find one that meets all of your criteria PLEASE let us know. charlie b |
#4
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#5
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"B a r r y B u r k e J r ." wrote:
On 22 Sep 2003 07:55:55 -0700, (Mark) wrote: Hi Guys, I'm interested in hearing the wreck's opinion on 10/12" sliding compound miter saw. My criteria areas a 1) Easy depth of cut setting - I'm thinking I would be able to plow out dado's with multiple passes on a long board easier than a dado head on the table saw. You want a Radial Arm Saw if you're planning on dadoing with this tool. No SCMS I've ever seen could accept a dado set on the arbor, nor could it accept a depth of cut setting. Barry, The Delta 36-240 & 250 definitely allow you to set the depth of cut. While you're right about no dado blades I've used my 250 to nibble away dados in 1x & 2x with no problems. Scott -- An unkind remark is like a killing frost. No matter how much it warms up later, the damage remains. |
#6
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Since I owned good 10" blades I decided to go with a 10" slide. I
chose the Bosch and I'm so far very satisfied with my choice. I would say that the depth of cut adjustment is fairly easy but I have not used it with a dado blade. Compared to the Dewalt I find the angle adjustments to be a notch better. I have recently purchased an orbital sander and I again considered all brands but it ended up being a Bosch again. D.Martin Scott Brownell wrote in message ... "B a r r y B u r k e J r ." wrote: On 22 Sep 2003 07:55:55 -0700, (Mark) wrote: Hi Guys, I'm interested in hearing the wreck's opinion on 10/12" sliding compound miter saw. My criteria areas a 1) Easy depth of cut setting - I'm thinking I would be able to plow out dado's with multiple passes on a long board easier than a dado head on the table saw. You want a Radial Arm Saw if you're planning on dadoing with this tool. No SCMS I've ever seen could accept a dado set on the arbor, nor could it accept a depth of cut setting. Barry, The Delta 36-240 & 250 definitely allow you to set the depth of cut. While you're right about no dado blades I've used my 250 to nibble away dados in 1x & 2x with no problems. Scott |
#7
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![]() "Rumpty" wrote in message ... Simple, you need a DeWalt RAS. -- Rumpty Radial Arm Saw Forum: http://forums.delphiforums.com/woodbutcher/start I always wonder what the people suggesting a RAS instead of a sliding compound miter saw are thinking. Do they truly not understand that a miter saw goes with you where you are working while a RAS stays in one place? -Jack |
#8
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On Tue, 23 Sep 2003 09:25:01 -0700, "JackD" wrote:
I always wonder what the people suggesting a RAS instead of a sliding compound miter saw are thinking. Do they truly not understand that a miter saw goes with you where you are working while a RAS stays in one place? Maybe not everyone needs the saw to be portable? That would be my guess. Barry |
#9
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![]() "B a r r y B u r k e J r ." wrote in message ... On Tue, 23 Sep 2003 09:25:01 -0700, "JackD" wrote: I always wonder what the people suggesting a RAS instead of a sliding compound miter saw are thinking. Do they truly not understand that a miter saw goes with you where you are working while a RAS stays in one place? Maybe not everyone needs the saw to be portable? That would be my guess. Barry I would imagine that the people asking the question generally would want it to be portable. Otherwise they would be looking at an RAS right? -Jack |
#10
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JackD wrote:
I always wonder what the people suggesting a RAS instead of a sliding compound miter saw are thinking. Do they truly not understand that a miter saw goes with you where you are working while a RAS stays in one place? -Jack For use in the applications that the original poster stated a RAS would be the best choice. -- Jack Novak Buffalo, NY - USA |
#11
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I suspect there is still some fallout from when Delta (and others?)
portrayed a RAS to be good for planing, drill press, routing, etc.. Sorta like a cheap Do-All machine. Probably were jealous of ShopSmith. Anyone that ever tried to use one for those purposes (that I have talked with) were VERY disappointed with the outcome. It didn't last so that should tell you something. And that back when DeWalt made a hell of a RAS. My father bought one; last machine he ever bought. I always attributed it to the RAS good-for- everything salesmanship. On Tue, 23 Sep 2003 09:25:01 -0700, "JackD" wrote: "Rumpty" wrote in message ... Simple, you need a DeWalt RAS. -- Rumpty Radial Arm Saw Forum: http://forums.delphiforums.com/woodbutcher/start I always wonder what the people suggesting a RAS instead of a sliding compound miter saw are thinking. Do they truly not understand that a miter saw goes with you where you are working while a RAS stays in one place? -Jack |
#12
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On Tue, 23 Sep 2003 09:50:05 -0700, "JackD" wrote:
I would imagine that the people asking the question generally would want it to be portable. Otherwise they would be looking at an RAS right? Not in my case. I bought an SCMS for stationary use in my shop. I have a table saw for ripping, dadoing, and extra-precision crosscutting. My SCMS is usually used for roughing lumber to length, and crosscuts when precision beyond a 64'th isn't necessary. I occasionally move it, but not to the extent that moving a RAS would be a huge problem. My SCMS is set up with dust hood, board supports, etc... Barry |
#13
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On Mon, 22 Sep 2003 19:27:08 -0400, Scott Brownell
wrote: The Delta 36-240 & 250 definitely allow you to set the depth of cut. While you're right about no dado blades I've used my 250 to nibble away dados in 1x & 2x with no problems. I have the same saw, I never even knew it had a depth of cut setting. G After I did the ol' RTFM, I'm a bit unconvinced about it's accuracy. I'm sure it would be fine for roughing a half-lap joint for framing, but how would it work for fine stuff? Barry |
#15
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"B a r r y B u r k e J r ." wrote:
On Mon, 22 Sep 2003 19:27:08 -0400, Scott Brownell wrote: The Delta 36-240 & 250 definitely allow you to set the depth of cut. While you're right about no dado blades I've used my 250 to nibble away dados in 1x & 2x with no problems. I have the same saw, I never even knew it had a depth of cut setting. G After I did the ol' RTFM, I'm a bit unconvinced about it's accuracy. I'm sure it would be fine for roughing a half-lap joint for framing, but how would it work for fine stuff? Barry It just takes a couple of minutes to set up. I've used it for both framing & finish trim applications with excellent results. If I had alot to do then I'd definitely use a router or dado in the TS but for just a couple then it's a no-brainer to just use the SCMS. Try it sometime. Scott -- An unkind remark is like a killing frost. No matter how much it warms up later, the damage remains. |
#16
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On Wed, 24 Sep 2003 09:23:43 -0400, Scott Brownell
wrote: If I had alot to do then I'd definitely use a router or dado in the TS but for just a couple then it's a no-brainer to just use the SCMS. Try it sometime. I will. Thanks for the tip, I learn something new every day here on the ol' 'wreck. Barry |
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