I think that they should be given another 24 hours to tell the full story about their tests.
Peter
Hi so far I did not respond not to ge tthe emotion back into this thread , I asked Peter privately what he did but choose not to post here but if being asked....
I think the full story can be read in the thread that was locked, nothing more to say about that, I think in that thread we have mentioned that it is definitely possible to cut thick lumps of timberwith the Carvex but that it can also go wrong.
What was the difference between Peters test and ours:
* We used the metal guide , maybe blade drift combined with this caused an issue with the Carvex, Carvex manual states use on rails for 20mm only, using the metal guide is comparable to a rail so it could be accepted as being used against instruction form the manufacturer. What's strange here is that the 3 other saws with guides did not show these issues.
* Peter appears to have gotten his hands on the new Carvex blades, we where not able to get these and tested with the Trion blades, this may make a difference, again why only with the Carvex and not with the other 3 saws?
* Peter hardly pushed the saw and let the saw do the job, in our test a gentle amount of pressure was applied to cut faster, is this good practise? debatable probably not, however Carvex is the one that showed the issues and it claims through the higher speed to cut faster.
Thats about it for the differences.
If we take the test from Art at Work into consideration that showed both the same sparks and worn out blades as we saw them that the Carvex is particularly critical to how it's being treated. If handled with greatest care it can do the job but what percentage of people will go beyond that limit in daily (professional) life?
I'm a bit dissapointed in the responses in the three treads that our test if bashed all over , Art of Work his test is better believed while generaly it's the same test with similar results and when Peter posts to succesfully cut a thick piece of lumber everybody seems to forget the rest and only believe he did the right thing, I know some of the posts me and my fellow testers made where at or sometimes over the line, should not have happened but I find it a pitty that the discussion was around that and to disbelieve what we had done rather than to discuss on the actual problem. Sparks in a workshop with dust can easily set your workshop on fire. Should that be possible with a saw positioned at this (basically at any) level in the tool market?