ScaredyCat
Established Member
I'm about to push the button on my first table saw. I'm going to say a few words about my situation first to avoid "buy a Wadkin" replies. My house is a listed building in a conservation area and its garden is akin to the size of a postage stamp, possibly 2 on a good day so we're ruling out "build a workshop then buy a Wadkin". I have to do my woodwork with powered tools outside and I have to store them in the house. This means they all have to be pretty portable to start with and my storage space is an upstairs bedroom. So, really, quite portable.
There is a possibility that I could store some stuff in the hallway (it's really a room immediately off the front door, we just use it as a glorified hallway not as living space) but I'd need to build some cabinets to hide it all in so that it looks acceptable to the boss. That's later and really just a sidebar.
I've narrowed my choice to 2, but I'm open to other suggestions too.
I've seen some people here have a Scheppach HS105 and seem fairly happy with them, so that's one, the other is the Dewalt 745 - this is really at the top of my budget of £450 (absolute) max - which seem to be popular too. The Scheppach leaves me with some money to buy other bits and pieces, the DeWalt does not. Does the DeWalt offer much more for that extra? I do like that the fence clips in and locks. Mitre slots on the dewalt seem to be just over 19mm and from what I've read here the Scheppach are too.
I plan to built a stand for it and after each session, I'd remove the saw, carry it upstairs and then do the same with the stand, this would make it all a bit lighter. The base of the stand would have keys so that the saw was always in the same place.
So, any views on the two saws? Any other suggestions? I did look at the Evolution Rage 5-S but the only 'reviews' I can find are from people who were sent them for free by Evolution - I can't find any where someone went and bought one themselves to give a proper unbiased review. I also looked at the Bosch GTS10XC but that is sadly too expensive. I did like that it had a sliding carriage though.
I'm about to push the button on my first table saw. I'm going to say a few words about my situation first to avoid "buy a Wadkin" replies. My house is a listed building in a conservation area and its garden is akin to the size of a postage stamp, possibly 2 on a good day so we're ruling out "build a workshop then buy a Wadkin". I have to do my woodwork with powered tools outside and I have to store them in the house. This means they all have to be pretty portable to start with and my storage space is an upstairs bedroom. So, really, quite portable.
There is a possibility that I could store some stuff in the hallway (it's really a room immediately off the front door, we just use it as a glorified hallway not as living space) but I'd need to build some cabinets to hide it all in so that it looks acceptable to the boss. That's later and really just a sidebar.
I've narrowed my choice to 2, but I'm open to other suggestions too.
I've seen some people here have a Scheppach HS105 and seem fairly happy with them, so that's one, the other is the Dewalt 745 - this is really at the top of my budget of £450 (absolute) max - which seem to be popular too. The Scheppach leaves me with some money to buy other bits and pieces, the DeWalt does not. Does the DeWalt offer much more for that extra? I do like that the fence clips in and locks. Mitre slots on the dewalt seem to be just over 19mm and from what I've read here the Scheppach are too.
I plan to built a stand for it and after each session, I'd remove the saw, carry it upstairs and then do the same with the stand, this would make it all a bit lighter. The base of the stand would have keys so that the saw was always in the same place.
So, any views on the two saws? Any other suggestions? I did look at the Evolution Rage 5-S but the only 'reviews' I can find are from people who were sent them for free by Evolution - I can't find any where someone went and bought one themselves to give a proper unbiased review. I also looked at the Bosch GTS10XC but that is sadly too expensive. I did like that it had a sliding carriage though.