chrispuzzle":1clmg41j said:
Alan- AKA The Woodman":1clmg41j said:
I wasted £200 of my money on a 'Grass is greener' Axminster AWFS18 machine only to find the grass isn't green, let alone greener !
Besides, all the faults you've listed in the past are obvious from the pictures and specs - you are very experienced, much more so than most of us. You know what the Hegner design is like - and the slow blade changing has been mentioned often in threads about the Axminster. It's not like you didn't know all this stuff when you forked out the money, surely?
Although I would never, ever claim that the blade changing is quick, it gets a lot quicker with practise. On the other hand, I have never broken a bolt, no matter how hard I tighten it - which was as tight as possible, at first, before I realised I didn't need so much pressure.
Chris.....I did know of a few faults when I bought the Axminster but they were things I could live with if the saw overall was a good performer. Take the small narrow table for example, extending or even replacing it would be easy. I also knew that regardless of changing the top clamp for a Hegner quick clamp, the bottom clamp would remain a pain in the proverbial.
Changing the bottom clamp to a Diamond holder was always going to happen. These changes were in my mind before I even took delivery of the saw so everything else relied on how it performed.
Sadly, it didn't perform at all well and I was extremely disappointed.
I am talking overall performance and not just blade changing.
The saw was sweet on the low vibration side but it just didn't want to cut fast and speed is what I needed. It was like a snail compared to every other saw I've owned and the reason is one of it being too well engineered. The blade had not even a hint of orbital action which if you've ever used a jigsaw with orbital action, you'll know what I mean for how effective it is. The aggressive orbital/rocking cutting action of a 'C' arm saw proves this point nicely.
The downside of no back and forward movement of the blade is that sawdust has trouble escaping on material thicker than the stroke of the machine hence the slow cutting of the Axminster.
I am constantly cutting material 21-24mm thick so it's a real issue for me.
I can improve the cutting speed by adapting the stroke to above 25mm but around 30mm will cut even faster.
I did a similar stroke alteration on a Delta I had and it worked really well.
The trouble I have at the moment is that I don't feel inclined to put the time into doing all that need doing which is why the Ax is gathering dust in the corner. Who knows, maybe in future I might get the enthusiasm to adapt it so watch this space !
Regarding the broken bolts thingy on Delta clamps.....I should've made it clear that the bolt breaking happens over time and not with a single instance as you seem to think.