segovia":17cftsds said:
I was thinking of buying a hand held circular saw to rip sheets of timber into manageable sizes for the table saw. What are the benefit of plunge circular saws. Also is it false economy to buy cheaply, I am thinking should I get something that will do teh job for £100.00 or invest up to £400.00 +
The benefit of plunge (track) circular saws (I use the Festool) is that you don't need to use a table saw for sheet goods. They are precise.
The torsion box dividers were all cut with my TS55
If you want to make two cuts (CS rough, TS exact) then get a cheaper CS (and a good dust mask).
My TS has a table that is much too small to ever use for large pieces of sheet goods. Also I don't want to allocate the space needed by a TS able to cut sheet goods.
The minimum is about 2x the longest piece + a meter, and moving heavy goods past the blade. 8-[ With my TS55 I need 1x longest piece + about 50cm and I only move the saw =D> .
For me the decision was easy I couldn't use my TS for sheet goods so would have had to replace it. I knew a lot of my cutting would be sheet goods and I would have to move them about mostly by myself. So if it was 3mm ply or 25mm+ mdf I could do it without too much difficulty using the TS55 (with very little dust).
That is my situation and opinion. I am a hobby woodworker. If I were doing production work cutting many pieces of sheet good to the same size I might have a different opinion. As it is I seldom have more than 10 or 20 so the TS55 is the perfect choice.