Aspiring FT Owner said:
For those of us working alone a lot on the around the house stuff, I sure could have used one of these on my last several projects.
Are they sturdy enough, and how do they feel if you use them daily? My adjustable sawhorses do most things well, but that clamp looks like it'd be nice to have.
Here's a photo of the Jawhorse:
And here is a photo of the current model Triton SJA200 SuperJaws. As you can see there are a lot of similarities:
Earlier this year I got the older-model SJA001 SuperJaws, which looks like this:
I find it to be a very useful machine, and the following video demonstrates its capabilities pretty well:
Video
In fact, I was using it only two days ago to hold a large and heavy 2.6m x 600mm x 40mm worktop in conjunction with a Triton MultiStand, and have used it to hold things whilst angle-grinding, when cutting logs (safer than holding them down with your foot!), pressing Dominoed assemblies together, holding pallets whilst dismantling them, and various other tasks.
There is nothing fragile or delicate about it, as it is an
extremely solid bit of kit, weighing 19.5kg/43lbs/3st 1lb (the new SJA200 is a bit lighter - notice how the bottom bracing is missing). The tripod design, in conjunction with their weight, means that they are very stable.
It would certainly be possible to get another one and use them as a pair of sawhorses (I was thinking of doing this myself, even though I have an MFT1080), but it's not the sort of set-up I'd want to load and unload from a truck all the time! They certainly wouldn't fall over if you kicked them, and if you did kick one, you'd come off worse! Although they don't take up much space when folded up, they have a pretty large footprint when erected - much more so than a standard sawhorse.
The design is quite old, and dates back to the days when it was manufactured by Elu with the designation MSB93:
In the UK you get Elu and Triton Superjaws
coming up for sale on eBay from time to time:
Some sellers say they have been languishing at the back of the garage for years, hence the sale, but I find new uses for mine all the time.
They are a completely different kettle of fish from Festool's MFT. You can do a lot with the SuperJaws that you can't do with the MFT, and a lot with the MFT that you can't with the SuperJaws. If you bought one, I'm sure you'd still find the other one very useful.
Here is a
review of the new SJA200 SuperJaws and a
comparison of the new SuperJaws SJA200 against the old SJA001 model.
Forrest