Hi all,
First of happy new year to everybody. I am looking to buy a mitre saw. To give you a very quick background here are a few points
1) I do bits and bob around the house, so no specific job. However I don’t mess with structural aspects of the house (i.e. joists, roof etc.), other than that I do everything around the house.
2) I would commit suicide before I buy another cheap tool. I have lost count of the number of times a cheap tool wrecked a very expensive material (kitchen worktop was last experience). So please whatever you recommend it should be quality.
3) I already have a dewlat jigsaw and a circular saw .
4) I am going to buy from eBay, either new or very lightly used. eBay money I would pay is up to £200, which works out at the £400-£500 retail shop price range.
Now with that out of the way, I can get to the mitre saw. My questions is really about what type I should go for? 10inch, 12 inch, sliding not sliding? To help further, here is some info of what I want the saw for.
1) as I said I will not be ripping through joists or anything. The thickest I imagine I would cut is your standard 2 inch partition wall timber, garden shed timber etc...
2) however, I also do some very light work, things like laminate flooring trims, door skirting, kitchen cornice, crown etc.. will a big 12inch rip through these?? can you get a any sense of accuracy cutting a 2cm thick maple trip with a 2000W beat? or will this depend on the blade?
3) the "widest" I will ever need to cut is a laminate flooring (anything more than that I will use the circular saw). Now, is it any point to get a sliding one just for this?
4) if accuracy and power made 10, I want at least a 7 on accuracy and 3 on power/capacity.
5) mobility is not a real issue for me, so a flip mitre/table saw could also be an option, are they any good or will the same thing that happens to all “multi” tools happen with this too (i.e. you buy it thinking you are buying two good tools in one, then you realize you bought half of each tool which together make one crap tool which does neither job properly)
I know you guys don't like vague requests for help, so I have tried to be quite specific here. look forward to your suggestions.
First of happy new year to everybody. I am looking to buy a mitre saw. To give you a very quick background here are a few points
1) I do bits and bob around the house, so no specific job. However I don’t mess with structural aspects of the house (i.e. joists, roof etc.), other than that I do everything around the house.
2) I would commit suicide before I buy another cheap tool. I have lost count of the number of times a cheap tool wrecked a very expensive material (kitchen worktop was last experience). So please whatever you recommend it should be quality.
3) I already have a dewlat jigsaw and a circular saw .
4) I am going to buy from eBay, either new or very lightly used. eBay money I would pay is up to £200, which works out at the £400-£500 retail shop price range.
Now with that out of the way, I can get to the mitre saw. My questions is really about what type I should go for? 10inch, 12 inch, sliding not sliding? To help further, here is some info of what I want the saw for.
1) as I said I will not be ripping through joists or anything. The thickest I imagine I would cut is your standard 2 inch partition wall timber, garden shed timber etc...
2) however, I also do some very light work, things like laminate flooring trims, door skirting, kitchen cornice, crown etc.. will a big 12inch rip through these?? can you get a any sense of accuracy cutting a 2cm thick maple trip with a 2000W beat? or will this depend on the blade?
3) the "widest" I will ever need to cut is a laminate flooring (anything more than that I will use the circular saw). Now, is it any point to get a sliding one just for this?
4) if accuracy and power made 10, I want at least a 7 on accuracy and 3 on power/capacity.
5) mobility is not a real issue for me, so a flip mitre/table saw could also be an option, are they any good or will the same thing that happens to all “multi” tools happen with this too (i.e. you buy it thinking you are buying two good tools in one, then you realize you bought half of each tool which together make one crap tool which does neither job properly)
I know you guys don't like vague requests for help, so I have tried to be quite specific here. look forward to your suggestions.