Thanks Linus saved me a postLook on the tab that says coming up and it's on 28/8/22
https://www.lidl.co.uk/p/diy/parkside-plunge-saw/p54072
Thanks Linus saved me a postLook on the tab that says coming up and it's on 28/8/22
https://www.lidl.co.uk/p/diy/parkside-plunge-saw/p54072
Thank you, very helpful.Look on the tab that says coming up and it's on 28/8/22
https://www.lidl.co.uk/p/diy/parkside-plunge-saw/p54072
Clamping is personal choice, I know many "experts" claim it's never needed (just rely on the track grips) but my preference is to clamp if the cut is long enough I need to move my weight to complete it. The only downside is you need clearance underneath which precludes initial cutting of sheets on the floor atop battens, but that's probably just my bad practice.Well i made it this morning Lidl early doors and am now the owner of a plunge track saw . SWMBO actualy reminded me as i woke up to not forget , Now the first question can you clamp the track to timber you are cutting or do you just rely on friction from foam rubber strips Second question if you can clamp it where do you get the clamps
I have that saw (or perhaps an earlier model). I bought a couple of extra tracks from Kompernaß (one of the many upsides of living in the EU ). I use the Makita rail clamps, not much more than the cheap cr*p ones you can find on sale - I find that I'm not happy with just friction to hold them in place....Well i made it this morning Lidl early doors and am now the owner of a plunge track saw . SWMBO actualy reminded me as i woke up to not forget , Now the first question can you clamp the track to timber you are cutting or do you just rely on friction from foam rubber strips Second question if you can clamp it where do you get the clamps
That was my thoughts friction verses vibration bound to move , So i will have a look at the makita ones you have thanksI have that saw (or perhaps an earlier model). I bought a couple of extra tracks from Kompernaß (one of the many upsides of living in the EU ). I use the Makita rail clamps, not much more than the cheap cr*p ones you can find on sale - I find that I'm not happy with just friction to hold them in place....
So you have a wife who scours the DIY section, sees the torx screws and thinks 'hubby would love those..' ??My wife picked up a couple of boxes of Torx screws for me this morning. Time will tell if there any Good, but price is pretty splendid
My wife knows better.So you have a wife who scours the DIY section, sees the torx screws and thinks 'hubby would love those..' ??
I’ve had a lot of Torx screws from Lidll and found them excellentMy wife picked up a couple of boxes of Torx screws for me this morning. Time will tell if there any Good, but price is pretty splendid
Thankyou for reminding me, I forgot so went in today (Monday) warwick branch, about midday. There were two on the correct shelf and a further two in a bin for other parkside tools. I bought one, not opened it yet.Well i made it this morning Lidl early doors and am now the owner of a plunge track saw . SWMBO actualy reminded me as i woke up to not forget , Now the first question can you clamp the track to timber you are cutting or do you just rely on friction from foam rubber strips Second question if you can clamp it where do you get the clamps
Have now opened it. Started off by joining the two 700mm tracks together, laid it on the kitchen worktop, one track flat on the worktop, far end of other track about 10mm in the air, no way this will work without clamps. The joining bar is not flat/straight. Also there is only one joining bar so the tracks look like they could twist out of alignment. The tracks do not line up perfectly, bit of a lip.I bought one, not opened it yet.
Full disclosure - I haven't got, or looked at the Tracksaw you have.Have now opened it. Started off by joining the two 700mm tracks together, laid it on the kitchen worktop, one track flat on the worktop, far end of other track about 10mm in the air, no way this will work without clamps. The joining bar is not flat/straight. Also there is only one joining bar so the tracks look like they could twist out of alignment. The tracks do not line up perfectly, bit of a lip.
I then attached the saw and adjusted it for a tight fit, bit fiddly to get it right. Slid nicely along the first track, got to the joint and it jammed. Backed the adjusters off a bit and it worked but obviously now a bit of slack.
I could do a bit of fine tuning on the joining bar and probably get it better, but it would still have only one bar and be a bit delicate, I can see the track having to be stored as two pieces.
Would appreciate comments from anyone who has used the parkside tracks.
It was there on Monday.Did notice in lidl weekly plunge tracksaw £79.99 with 140cm and 70cm track on next week
Have you found out yet what she is looking to buy?SWMBO actualy reminded me as i woke up to not forget
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