AJS mentioned the Hegner clone by Axminster, look at it they are fairly similar copy to the Hegner and I always felt they were a good alternative to the Hegner but in the past one or two people have made comments to the effect that they are no match for a 'real' Hegner. It would be nice if someone who owns one could give their honest opinion of it.
The thing is that at around £500 or so it might be better to stump up a bit extra for the 'real thing'?
Wood&wool mentions that the Hegner is heavy which is very true but that is of course a plus point (unless you have to lug it around) they are built in the style that most stuff used to be, that is heavy duty and long lasting, I liken the Hegner machine to old British made tools like Record vices and planes etc, if your granddad bought one 100 years ago and it was handed down it would still work perfectly fine and I think this applies to Hegner machines they are built to last, many other scrollsaws today look flimsy by comparison, often made with sheet steel rather than the heavy castings used by Hegner.
Many scrollsawers on facebook rave about Pegas Scrollsaws, I have no experience of them but the fact that they are manufactured in Taiwan would tend to veer me towards a German made Hegner.
Scrimper is only PARTLY right.
My own saw, marked "General International"/"Excalibur"/"Pegas" was indeed made in Taiwan. But so what? The big question is, wherever it was made, was it made using the same quality materials, the same design, the same fasteners, and with the same Quality Control as the original batches (which were designed and made in Canada BTW). And in the case of my (I'll call it "Exc 21" for short - Excalibur 21 inch) most definitely DOES tick all the above boxes, "despite" the fact that it was made in Taiwan (as it clearly says in the Manual and said on the box).
And that's the reason I chose it over a Hegner - I bought mine in person at a dealer in Germany, who gave me the chance to try both machines side by side in their own workshop. I chose it over the Hegner because - A) it was just as well made as the Hegner; B) it was cheaper than the Hegner (by a bit, not by much!); C) the spares were MUCH cheaper than Hegner; D) it is an overall much more modern design, especially with regard to the tilting head, rather than the Hegner's (and most other machines') tilting table. Whether you do much in the way of angled cuts or not, and I don't do that many, the tilting head is a HUGE advantage over the Hegner's tilting table.
In short I "bless the day" that I chose the Exc 21 over the Hegner, and that choice is written up in detail by myself in a old post (6 or 7 years) titled "Biting the bullet". But the above reasoning is a summary. Anyway ..................
Now it gets complicated, sorry.
1. Axminster Tools in UK are/were the UK agent/distributor for Pegas, and they originally sold the Excalibur/Pegas machines (the 18, 21 and 30 inch models) direct to the public WITH ONLY the name Pegas. (Pegas do not deal direct with the public, and although they make blades in Switzerland, they do NOT make the machines, they simply "buy" theirs direct from Taiwan with their own Pegas name on them). But then . ..........................
2. Axminster Tools started selling machines WHICH LOOK identical to the above (apart from the addition of a No Volt Release switch which all the above machines don't have), and apart from the fact that they then came in a different colour and with the name "Axminster Trade + a number" on them.
3. As said above, apart from the name, the colour, and the NVR switch, they look identical to all the above machines, but then, a series of posts were being made on UKW here - not just one or two, but quite a few, from several different members - all complaining about excess vibration; about breakdowns of various sorts; about Warranty exchange machines being just as bad if not worse, etc, etc, etc.
As a result of item 3 above I did some research, mainly in the US (their scroll saw market is MUCH bigger than in the UK or Europe I think), and discovered that there are indeed two separate versions of "the same" machine, one being significantly cheapened. And it appears to be those "cheapened machines" which are causing all the trouble - AND the bad reputation that "General International"/"Excalibur"/"Pegas" machines generally now seem to have on this side of the Atlantic.
But in short, all the problems have NOTHING AT ALL to do with being made in Taiwan; and NOTHING AT ALL to do with any machines marked "Pegas": And you CAN buy "Pegas" machines (excellent) from various dealers in Europe, but not I THINK, any longer from Axminster, who now exclusively sell their different coloured "Trade" machines. For example, I bought my Excalibur/Pegas 21 from Dictum Tools in Germany.
I shall now "temporarily" close this post while I go back and look for links to the 2 posts referred to above. When found I'll come back and post them in a P.S. below.
But in the meantime,
@scrimper, with respect you are quite wrong to suggest that because something was made in Germany it must be excellent and something made in Taiwain must be rubbish. The above example proves that to be a fallacy! And because I live in Switzerland and see a lot of German products, I can assure that the Germans - and Swiss - are just as "good" at producing crap as anyone else in Asia or anywhere else!
P.S. Here are the links to my 2 posts referred to above:
"Excalibur" scroll saws | UKworkshop.co.uk
Biting the bullet - Ex 21 | UKworkshop.co.uk
Sorry for all the "complications". NOT my doing (for once)!
HTH to clear up the confusion.