Hello FOG,
This is my first post on here and, feeling like I’ve found a group of like minded consumers, I wanted to solicit some advice about my current table saw. A family relative got me into woodworking 3-4 years ago and I’ve made a lot of great furniture that I’m really proud of during that time. It wasn’t until last summer I was able to get a garage of my own (apartment renter in a city) to wrench my car and do woodworking projects.
So here is where I’m at- I hate this Dewalt Flexvolt battery operated table saw I bought last summer. I bought it because I had time to build some shop furniture ahead of moving to my new apartment, but didn’t know what the power situation would be in the garage. Turns out the garage has decent wiring and handles the near 15a draw on my 115v 13” planer just fine.
Now I’ve built some pretty awesome furniture out of 4/4 to 8/4 hard maple, white oak and walnut with this table saw; but not without a ton of blade deflection and lots of burning/blade marks. Honestly, I didn’t know how bad it was until I bought my TS75.
Dewalt recommends you use the proprietary 8.25” blade to extend battery life, which has a thin kerf and 24 teeth. I just threw a 30 tooth, 8” Forrest Woodworker II on it today thinking I could improve this saw, and it burned every piece of hardwood I sent through the machine despite trying to feed as carefully as I could. I’m really annoyed at this point with the machine and am not really motivated to buy a 24t Diablo blade for it after spending $120 on the Forrest. On top of all this, it doesn’t accept a dado stack which has cost me a lot of time on past projects. Should I expect worse cutting performance from a thicker kerf 24t blade, because it’s asking more from the saw?
I am planning for a cross country move in the next year and haven’t bought my “forever” table saw yet because it doesn’t make sense to have that until I move (and own my workspace). I spent all winter looking for a used contractor saw and never found the right one. If I bought a normal 115v Dewalt Jobsite table saw, do you think I would see a considerable increase in performance over this flexvolt? I’m really torn on what to do. I truthfully don’t want another job site table saw. Ideally I’d close my eyes and buy an Erika 70 or 85; but at that expense I think I’d rather have a proper cabinet saw. Not to mention, I am not sure you can get the 70 on 115v any longer. Shame that Festool’s CS50 and CS70 are difficult to get stateside, and from what I can tell have a pretty crap fence (I need to rip mostly).
Honestly I’d buy the cabinet saw to save my sanity this summer, and figure out the headache of moving or selling it down the line. But, if the corded 10” job site saw is going to hog through my rip cuts that much better I’m willing to go buy one too.
Thanks in advance!
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
This is my first post on here and, feeling like I’ve found a group of like minded consumers, I wanted to solicit some advice about my current table saw. A family relative got me into woodworking 3-4 years ago and I’ve made a lot of great furniture that I’m really proud of during that time. It wasn’t until last summer I was able to get a garage of my own (apartment renter in a city) to wrench my car and do woodworking projects.
So here is where I’m at- I hate this Dewalt Flexvolt battery operated table saw I bought last summer. I bought it because I had time to build some shop furniture ahead of moving to my new apartment, but didn’t know what the power situation would be in the garage. Turns out the garage has decent wiring and handles the near 15a draw on my 115v 13” planer just fine.
Now I’ve built some pretty awesome furniture out of 4/4 to 8/4 hard maple, white oak and walnut with this table saw; but not without a ton of blade deflection and lots of burning/blade marks. Honestly, I didn’t know how bad it was until I bought my TS75.
Dewalt recommends you use the proprietary 8.25” blade to extend battery life, which has a thin kerf and 24 teeth. I just threw a 30 tooth, 8” Forrest Woodworker II on it today thinking I could improve this saw, and it burned every piece of hardwood I sent through the machine despite trying to feed as carefully as I could. I’m really annoyed at this point with the machine and am not really motivated to buy a 24t Diablo blade for it after spending $120 on the Forrest. On top of all this, it doesn’t accept a dado stack which has cost me a lot of time on past projects. Should I expect worse cutting performance from a thicker kerf 24t blade, because it’s asking more from the saw?
I am planning for a cross country move in the next year and haven’t bought my “forever” table saw yet because it doesn’t make sense to have that until I move (and own my workspace). I spent all winter looking for a used contractor saw and never found the right one. If I bought a normal 115v Dewalt Jobsite table saw, do you think I would see a considerable increase in performance over this flexvolt? I’m really torn on what to do. I truthfully don’t want another job site table saw. Ideally I’d close my eyes and buy an Erika 70 or 85; but at that expense I think I’d rather have a proper cabinet saw. Not to mention, I am not sure you can get the 70 on 115v any longer. Shame that Festool’s CS50 and CS70 are difficult to get stateside, and from what I can tell have a pretty crap fence (I need to rip mostly).
Honestly I’d buy the cabinet saw to save my sanity this summer, and figure out the headache of moving or selling it down the line. But, if the corded 10” job site saw is going to hog through my rip cuts that much better I’m willing to go buy one too.
Thanks in advance!
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk