Good info there Malcolm, thanks. From what I can see, apart from the colour it looks exactly the same as mine. I'm sure it'll be a good'un.
Re NVR, I can't understand the need for one either, and as I said in an earlier post, mine hasn't got one at all, just the little (rubber booted) toggle switch on top of the arm at the front, just below the speed control knob. And mine is fully EU/CE approved (would have to be for the German market, where I bought it)! Maybe it's a UK-only thing?
Re a foot switch, I'm really surprised about this too. From an earlier post I made on the subject, I got caught in this "trap" and ended up buying the (rather expensive) device through the official Excalibur (General International) dealer here in Switzerland.
I posted all the details of that foot switch back last year, including the original manufacturer details. It was expensive (I seem to recall about 70 Euros - I can look it up on the post if you like) but just like you I was scared about voiding the Warranty so went with the "official" unit. I was told (by the Swiss dealer) that the expensive foot switch they sold was necessary because "of all the complicated electronics inside" and also "because it doesn't have a NVR switch"! BUT, OTOH, when I contacted Axi about their foot switch they told me that their foot switch wouldn't be suitable for my machine because my machine did NOT have an NVR!!!
About the only thing I can see that's in any way "different" about my machine to any other "normal" machine is that the motor is 60 Volts DC (so I suppose it's got some electronic 230 Volt AC to DC rectification inside it) - I wonder what type of motor the Axi machine has?
But note BTW that there is NO speed control within the foot switch I now have, like there is in, say, my wife's sewing machine, so I really can't understand all the hassle. Also, BTW, when I was researching all this last year I found posts in various scroll sawing Forums from Australian Excalibur users having exactly the same problems. I just don't understand it.
But as said, having paid all that money for the saw I didn't want to have a potential Warranty problem, so in the end I just gave up and bought the "official" switch, just to be sure.
I think the real answer is for GI to supply all their machines with a foot switch, ideally as standard, but even as an extra cost option would be OK. They do this actually, but only for machines for the US & Canadian market, which of course is 110 Volts mains supply. When I contacted them in Canada they had no interest at all in providing any details of a foot switch suitable for European mains supply - on the phone their Export Sales Manager asked me (rather sarcastically I thought) if I wanted him to do an internet search for me. His excuse was that the foot switch they supply for the N American market is not CE approved.
So I for one will be interested to hear what Axi say to you about a foot switch for your new machine.
Keep us posted please.
Krgds
AES