Getting a little confused – am I missing something? [unsure]
OP says:
“...as soon as the saw started to get slightly bogged down it kept blowing fuses on the plug of my transformer...”
“...it was tripping on the 240 plug going into the wall”
“The cut out feature on the saw came on twice when I first got the saw when I was pushing it too hard now it blows fuses on the transformer...”
Does the TS55 have an internal thermal trip??
I'm going to assume (always a bit dodgy to assume anything of course) that all comments re. 'tripping' etc, on this occasion, are referring to the fuse in mains plug blowing up.
And – that nothing else connected to transformer.
In the UK, the mains plug will be on the 230v side of transformer.
If socket on wall is connected to a ring circuit; it shouldn't matter what else is connected to that circuit.
Surely the correct fuses are being put into the plug?
If so, then it follows the 'transformer + saw' drawing too much current.
Tried another transformer; so seems fairly reasonable to assume the saw is the culprit.
Don't reckon long leads should cause excessive current to be drawn – but anyway, was (apparently) working fine – until saw started to bog down a little.
See where this is going??
Have you got a friendly electrician knocking around; who could check how much current is being drawn – using one of those 'clamp' meters perhaps.
If so – get him to check current with saw running (but not cutting) for a minute or two; then check again whilst saw cutting; in particular, is current drawn rising excessively as saw starts to struggle?
Hopefully the results would help clarify what's going on.
Similarly, you could experiment; by not letting saw ever bog down at all, at all!
How long will it run for?
Is it good to let any power tool struggle too much, for too long?
Have a gentle suspicion that p'raps too much is being expected from saw, &/or, saw blade.
Please let us know how you get on, and, good luck getting it sorted. [smile]