LocalOak
Established Member
I seem to have convinced myself that, despite my desire to have a new shiny piece of kit, that I don't need a table saw for the moment. But am I missing something?
I am slowly redoing our house which involves quite a lot of building shelving units, a cabinet for the TV, perhaps the odd L&B door and a bit of general fitting of skirtings and so on.
I work in mdf, softwood for carcasses and some hardwoods, mainly oak. I am not, and never will be, a pro, but I do take on some pretty ambitious projects. I have just built a kitchen and utility room out of old beech and iroko school chemistry lab benches.
I'm pretty good with a circular saw and guide, and having just come across sawboards will make and use those as well. Space in my workshop is tight and I have to do most of my sheet cutting down outside so I suspect any table saw will need to be portable, or at least luggable.
I want to move on to furniture, boxes and more hobbyish things when this work is finished (probably a couple of years at least). A table saw would be a big investment (I would buy a decent one, been drooling over the Bosch GT10) but even though I would like one I am really not sure I need one.
So, would a table saw really be a big advantage over sawboards, careful marking out, my (muscle powered) mitre saw and a bit of thinking before cutting?
I don't want to be persuaded necessarily, I am just not sure whether I have really grasped what a table saw could do for me?
Any thoughts?
Thanks
Toby
I am slowly redoing our house which involves quite a lot of building shelving units, a cabinet for the TV, perhaps the odd L&B door and a bit of general fitting of skirtings and so on.
I work in mdf, softwood for carcasses and some hardwoods, mainly oak. I am not, and never will be, a pro, but I do take on some pretty ambitious projects. I have just built a kitchen and utility room out of old beech and iroko school chemistry lab benches.
I'm pretty good with a circular saw and guide, and having just come across sawboards will make and use those as well. Space in my workshop is tight and I have to do most of my sheet cutting down outside so I suspect any table saw will need to be portable, or at least luggable.
I want to move on to furniture, boxes and more hobbyish things when this work is finished (probably a couple of years at least). A table saw would be a big investment (I would buy a decent one, been drooling over the Bosch GT10) but even though I would like one I am really not sure I need one.
So, would a table saw really be a big advantage over sawboards, careful marking out, my (muscle powered) mitre saw and a bit of thinking before cutting?
I don't want to be persuaded necessarily, I am just not sure whether I have really grasped what a table saw could do for me?
Any thoughts?
Thanks
Toby