I had the 745 but sold it on for a few reasons:
1) in a 4x2m shed it just wasn't practical space wise. Sure, it'll take sheet goods, but in a small space with anything else in it (e.g. a workbench!) it was all too close quarters. Longer crosscuts (anything over ~400mm) weren't the easiest to manage given the small table either.
2) it was bloomin loud.
3) while the rack and pinion fence was good for a contractor saw, I didn't find it accurate enough reliably enough.
I picked up a TS55 and have been more than happy with it used in conjunction with a couple of MFT type benches. Setting up for things you'd ideally do on a table saw (narrow rips for example) takes way longer... but then I'm not making a living off of it so my time is my own. All the rails and other assorted accessories take up next to no room too, as well as the saw itself packing away in a small systainer. The other nice [read: wallet threatening] use for the Festool rails is the compatibility with their routers and diamond cutting tools which all work off the same rails.
I don't use it for long repeated crosscuts (> 1m) or mitres - that's when the mitre saw comes out.
edit: oh, and the dust extraction with the TS55 kicks the 745 squarely in the nuts.
1) in a 4x2m shed it just wasn't practical space wise. Sure, it'll take sheet goods, but in a small space with anything else in it (e.g. a workbench!) it was all too close quarters. Longer crosscuts (anything over ~400mm) weren't the easiest to manage given the small table either.
2) it was bloomin loud.
3) while the rack and pinion fence was good for a contractor saw, I didn't find it accurate enough reliably enough.
I picked up a TS55 and have been more than happy with it used in conjunction with a couple of MFT type benches. Setting up for things you'd ideally do on a table saw (narrow rips for example) takes way longer... but then I'm not making a living off of it so my time is my own. All the rails and other assorted accessories take up next to no room too, as well as the saw itself packing away in a small systainer. The other nice [read: wallet threatening] use for the Festool rails is the compatibility with their routers and diamond cutting tools which all work off the same rails.
I don't use it for long repeated crosscuts (> 1m) or mitres - that's when the mitre saw comes out.
edit: oh, and the dust extraction with the TS55 kicks the 745 squarely in the nuts.