Hi all,
Contemplating a (possibly cordless) Festool track saw as I tend to find myself cutting up quite a bit of sheet material. I've read some great things abou the Festool track saw system and it appeals a lot. Trouble is, I'm struggling to justify the expense unless i can use it inside my tiny shop (just under 10'x8').
This summer when I could work outside I cut horizontally using an old circular saw and a home-made guide track and (bodged) zero clearance device, which worked albeit with moderate success (poor accuracy being the most common problem). However as winter approaches and my activities move indoors I am left wondering whether it's easy and safe enough to use a track saw to cut sheets of material that are held vertically or near-vertically (such as would be the case in a vertical panel saw). I've googled this and searched on here but searches keep directing me to vertical panel saws, and I definitely haven't got room or budget for one of those!
I'm not talking about full sheets; I get them cut at the suppliers so they fit in the car. The biggest I'm likely to be starting with is 4 feet square. That's just impossible to do horizontally in my shop without clearing most of it out into the garden first.
So, firstly is the accuracy and convenience worth the money or should I just remake my track and recalibrate everything every time it wears out; and secondly can it easily be used near-vertically as described when space does not allow horizontal cutting?
I want to be sure before I part with my cash
Many thanks
Contemplating a (possibly cordless) Festool track saw as I tend to find myself cutting up quite a bit of sheet material. I've read some great things abou the Festool track saw system and it appeals a lot. Trouble is, I'm struggling to justify the expense unless i can use it inside my tiny shop (just under 10'x8').
This summer when I could work outside I cut horizontally using an old circular saw and a home-made guide track and (bodged) zero clearance device, which worked albeit with moderate success (poor accuracy being the most common problem). However as winter approaches and my activities move indoors I am left wondering whether it's easy and safe enough to use a track saw to cut sheets of material that are held vertically or near-vertically (such as would be the case in a vertical panel saw). I've googled this and searched on here but searches keep directing me to vertical panel saws, and I definitely haven't got room or budget for one of those!
I'm not talking about full sheets; I get them cut at the suppliers so they fit in the car. The biggest I'm likely to be starting with is 4 feet square. That's just impossible to do horizontally in my shop without clearing most of it out into the garden first.
So, firstly is the accuracy and convenience worth the money or should I just remake my track and recalibrate everything every time it wears out; and secondly can it easily be used near-vertically as described when space does not allow horizontal cutting?
I want to be sure before I part with my cash
Many thanks