glenfield2
Established Member
Thanks to power tools I'm a modestly competent DIY-er. I do stuff around the house and re-fitted a burnt out canal boat recently. No workshop so it's all mainly hand held or portable stuff.
Basically at the moment I have an old but big and heavy Makita circular saw, a Worx mini circ saw, B&Q compound mitre saw, Wickes 1/4in router and cheap power planer and jigsaws plus a very useful Worx recip. cutter. That gets me by but only just.
I'm about to start another boat so it's an excuse to enlarge the tool base. At the moment I struggle with cutting sheet material mainly through handling the size of it, ripping down lengths of timber, including hardwoods and getting finished edges to these, cutting rebates, slots etc. Also accurately cutting curves in ply (I really struggle to get anything usable out of a jigsaw.)
Where could I best spend £5-600 improving my set up? I've tried a dewalt 745 table saw which was very good but would a track saw be more versatile? Any advice on router tables (I worry about routering my fingertips on these)?
I do strive for a quality finish so squareness, simple but neat joints etc are key. And boats are especially tricky as little is square or repeatable and every finished joint shows.
Basically at the moment I have an old but big and heavy Makita circular saw, a Worx mini circ saw, B&Q compound mitre saw, Wickes 1/4in router and cheap power planer and jigsaws plus a very useful Worx recip. cutter. That gets me by but only just.
I'm about to start another boat so it's an excuse to enlarge the tool base. At the moment I struggle with cutting sheet material mainly through handling the size of it, ripping down lengths of timber, including hardwoods and getting finished edges to these, cutting rebates, slots etc. Also accurately cutting curves in ply (I really struggle to get anything usable out of a jigsaw.)
Where could I best spend £5-600 improving my set up? I've tried a dewalt 745 table saw which was very good but would a track saw be more versatile? Any advice on router tables (I worry about routering my fingertips on these)?
I do strive for a quality finish so squareness, simple but neat joints etc are key. And boats are especially tricky as little is square or repeatable and every finished joint shows.