renderer01":6ygfypw5 said:
Hello Gents,
Thanks for data. Will give this a huge miss for the time being at least.
Merry Christmas.
Rend.
The Hegner Snobs ... and I will repeat "The Hegner Snobs" ...should to be banned from this forum for being totally destructive to the hobby of scroll sawing. Rend's reaction is the classic example and I have seen this situation occur very recently on this board where someone was asking very much the same question and got scared off by the Hegner Snobs saying that you can only have there chosen variety of machine and nothing else - just nothing else will do.
This really is a case where a moderator should step in and apply some pressure to such people and make the point to them officially that their advice is seriously impacting on the opportunity of people to take up scrolling at a price that is realistic. No one really wants to commit £500 to start a hobby; that sort of money is quite realistic when you have cut your teeth, but never at the start up point.
So please put-up-and-shut-up when this enquiry arises again as you are just putting people off.
Rend - have a consideration for the Axminster 'Jet JSS-16'. I bought the equivalent of this - it is badged by all sorts of tool dealers (Jet, Record, Woodstar, Clark, etc) - about a year ago at a sale. I played with it vaguely, but had no specific project and it went onto a shelf. This autumn the required project came up and I went up the learning curve to produce the Noahs's Ark and then the Nativity shown below.
The 'reindeer' is a 2 plane cut on the scroll saw, and the Wise Men in the Nativity are 30mm tall so you can get a reasonable idea of what detail can be achieved on such a machine by a novice.
I had the opportunity to try the Axminster AWFS18 after these items were made and found the Jet better in noise, vibration and general pleasantness of use. It's only advantage was the quick release lever above the blade, but its blade clamping was poorer.
The version of the Jet I have has an adjustable hold-down and a light. The Jet has a hold-down which helps a bit to begin with but my experience is that you will abandon this after a while - at the expense at that point of a blade or two; it doesn't have a light but that is no specific loss as you will always find a better adjustable light in Ikea or somewhere. It looks to me as the Jet has a quick release lever at the adjustment knob which would be nice to have.
I'm very happy with this machine - it's easy to handle and works well. Mine is a bit of a pain to do blade release when cutting internal, but at £100 I can live with that. The speed control is excellent.
On the basis of what I, as a complete novice, have made on the same model as the Jet, I would recommend it.
Rob