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Re: [Shop-talk] Miter saw or compound miter saw

To: KVacek@Ameritech.net, Shop-Talk List <shop-talk@autox.team.net>
Subject: Re: [Shop-talk] Miter saw or compound miter saw
From: Brian Kemp <bk13@earthlink.net>
Date: Tue, 03 Aug 2010 19:03:24 -0700
I'm very happy with my Dewalt 10" compound miter saw. Lots of trim work 
and pretty accurate. I saw the comment about looking for old USA made 
ones. Mine is 7-8 years old, so quality may have changed. Make sure 
whatever you get you can lift and carry. I also recommend an adjustable 
stand. See 40612 at Harbor Freight for a sample. I liked the Ryobi one 
from Home Depot better at $99 a few years ago.

Another advantage of a compound saw is the ability to back cut trim so 
the face is tighter. Sure you could stick a pencil under the board, but 
that makes it tougher for non-professionals to get an accurate cut.

Brian

Karl Vacek wrote:
> Hi everybody !
>
>  
>
> Been off this list for months - bad story, not relevant anyway.
>
>  
>
> My middle daughter is about to close on a house 150 miles from here and I
> will be needing to install some floors, baseboard, etc.  Unless I carry my
> hand miter box down there or just freehand everything with a Skilsaw, this
> seems like an excuse to buy a miter saw.
>
>  
>
> I do have a 10" old-style (cast iron column) Craftsman radial arm saw that I
> don't use since I use the 10" Unisaw.  Point is, I have lots of 10" blades
> and don't really need anything - this is an excuse to get a portable miter
> saw, not to gain any cutting capability I really need.
>
>  
>
> I was thinking Horrible Freight because of coupons, etc., and because most
> of the things I've bought there are fine for what they are.  I really need
> this to make a few hundred cuts at most - it won't be used every day at all.
> OTOH, I've seen some decent prices on real brands as well.
>
>  
>
> Sooooo.
>
> Do I get the compound saw for more flexibility, or the plain chop-action
> miter saw for rigidity ?  The compound seems fine in the store, though a bit
> clumsy and heavy for what it does.  Rigidity seems OK if I'm not doing
> cabinet work.  Any experience with HF saws ?
>
>  
>
> And since I have lots of 10" blades I figure I really should get a 10" saw,
> especially if it's a compound, but then again I don't need lots of blades
> for a saw like this and a 12" cuts more stuff.  Price at HF is maybe $10
> different, so that's not an issue.  Weight and convenience might be.  And
> 10" blades are just so common.  How do I decide ??
>
>  
>
> TIA
>
> Karl
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