Well after thinking long and hard I have actually splashed out on the baby Axminster band saw, answering my own question as a result :lol:
I've made a sawboard and am happily using my circular saw to rip the sheets, and really good to know its what others do too...
But the bandsaw is a revelation. I bought some new blades from Trucut, very good service, helpful on the phone and they seem to work very well to me (though I don't have anything much to compare them with). I find myself turning to it to do all sorts of stuff which I wouldn't have bothered with before, cutting a few bits of 3mm ply for spacers, trimming some offcuts to make brackets for fixing some legs to the wall for my new desk etc. Its a joy.
But most of all I have done what I consider is probably my first bit of "proper" woodwork. I have a branch of yew cut from a tree a couple of years ago, about 4" diameter at the thick end. For fun I cut a log, on the bandsaw, then had a go at ripping it into planks. Planed those smooth (some sanding, the grain was all over the place) and have just made some very crude finger joints on the bandsaw (far too small for comfort, couldn't quite get my 6mm chisel in to clean them up, pain in the proverbial) and put together the shell of a little box. Have butt glued two of the planks (they are about 30mm wide by about 3mm thick) to make a bottom of the box and cut a larger piece from the stock to make a rebated top. Its not beautiful, there is a lot more to learn, but it will be OK to give to SWIMBO as a little present. Dead chuffed, squared ends with my shooting board, planed to a glass like finish with my BU jack, marked out and cut moderately accurate finger joints, hey I feel like a real woodworker!
Not sure I'm prepared to post photos, not finished yet and I'd have to find an angle that didn't show the huge gaps between the finger joints.
I'm sure a bigger, stronger bandsaw would be fantastic but I don't have the floor space for one and I've learned to go slowly and be patient with the sawing on the Axminster ASBW2, its a great tool.
Thanks for all the advice, am a happy man!
Toby