These are my observations so far, C&V'ed from the HUKD thread.
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My Lidl had 2 on display, although they may have had more in the back.
Arrived at 07:50, young lady and elderly couple in front of me, so felt reasonably safe
On first inspection it looks rather well made, certainly the depth stop, plunge action etc are spot-on, fitted the track together and passed the saw along it, very very minor bind as it passes along the join, well not so much bind as hiccup, if you know what I mean.
The only thing I can fault is on one end of the track over the last 4-6", the middle rubber appears to protrude further than the outer ones, which when the saw is sat on it, gives a slight side to side rocking action, fine across the rest of the track though. I may be able to find a remedy, if not am aware of said iffy end and can compensate.
Not had chance to actually test yet, but be aware a test cut needs to be made to trim the break out rubber edging.
Edit: Just ran a quick test cut in my lunch break, straight edge 6' spirit level says the track is straight and true, the test cut however the same straight edge shows 2mm run off, this maybe down to not cramping the track to the test piece of mdf, and it may have slightly slipped, if not, ugh, dunno.
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(Quote) mjbuckhurst
Mine looks good, no rubber track issues on my tracks, tested the motor and it spins, which is good, it will be a couple of months before I can use it in earnest, time to purchase a pair of clamps and I'm ready to go.
Thanks to the OP, best deal in ages as far as I'm concerned.
mike
Go down the bottom of the track every 4-6" with a steel rule or similar guaranteed straight edge, are the rubber strips definitely all the same level? Could just be mine I suppose.
I don't think the entire length of the track can be used, there are two turn screws front and back of the saw to 'tighten' the saw to the track laterally, until the rear one is engaged, there's 2mm or so of play in the saw left to right of the cut, so if using the full length of track, the saw is already 7 or 8" into the workpiece before the rear turn screw engages, guaranteed failure, so be warned.
TBH though I'm trying to replicate the accuracy of a table saw, which I don't believe this can do, given it's limitations.