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12” Dual Compound Sliding Miter Saw

jakgop21

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 9, 2011
Messages
79
Hello GJF members , I am looking to buy a 12” dual compound sliding miter saw .

Leaning towards the Milwaukee but wanted your thoughts to see if I should consider another brand .

I was leaning towards cordless .

Any ideas or info would be greatly appreciated .

Thank you


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jshillin

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 9, 2008
Messages
5,620
Location
PA
I don't have the 12" milwaukee M18 sliding Miter saw, but I do have the 10" version and use the hell out of it. I bought it before they had the 12" option.

I put it on the Rigid Miter saw stand that is on sale today for $99 and it's super convenient. It stands in the corner until I need it, then it takes a whole 5 seconds to roll out and use it.

I highly suggest ordering that miter saw stand today though, then figure out exactly which saw you need. It doesn't pop up at 1/2 off often.
 
Last edited:

txvwnut

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 1, 2015
Messages
7,662
Location
Bedford, Texas
I’ve got a corded Dewalt and it’s been a really good saw. Plenty of power to get through the harder woods.
 

MoonRise

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 5, 2010
Messages
4,031
Location
NJ
Dewalt 780.

Next step down, Dewalt 779.

Cordless? Do you NEED cordless capability on a sliding compound miter saw? Off-grid building a cabin and no generator or solar system available? :lol:

Uses? Trim and molding? Framing? Decks? All around use?
 
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GrantCee

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 23, 2010
Messages
808
Location
Willamette Valley, Oregon
Having owned both corded and cordless, 10" & 12", single bevel and dual bevel...here's my take:

My previous miter saw was a 12" single-bevel, non-sliding corded Ridgid that I used extensively for years. At the time I bought it, I couldn't afford a slider, so I got the bigger blade to handle bigger material. IMO, the slider makes up for blade size; most people don't need the big blades any longer. My 10" Makita cordless slider will handle everything my 12" did, and more. Given the size, weight, and cost of the 12" sliding miter saws, I don't see the need except for very specific jobs.

If you plan on only using your saw in one fixed location in your shop, go corded. If you have any intentions or possibilities of needing to move it around to be closer to the work, go cordless. Cordless miter saws are awesome and easily the equal of their corded counterparts these days.

As always, if you go cordless buy the saw that fits into your battery system (if you're already invested in cordless tools.) I bought a Makita, since I was already invested in the system. (Though their slider mechanism makes for a much more compact saw than others, so if I'd been in the market for a corded version I'd still have bought Makita.)

Over the years I've found the best accessory purchase (other than blades, of course) is a mobile miter saw stand. Not only can I move it around my garage, the stand makes it easy to transport to the job. I take the saw to where I need it once, rather than carrying wood all over the place every time I need a cut.
 

Notgrownup

Well-known member
Joined
May 5, 2014
Messages
5,977
Location
Snow Hill NC
I had a small Craftsmen and last year upgraded to a 12” Hitachi. I love it but it’s just for home uses. Nothing commercial so it works perfectly for me.Got it set up on a folding rolling stand made for it.
I just make sure I have the best blade I can afford on it.
 
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