I have 3 metal cutting bandsaws atm; the first HF saw is Taiwanese, bought when HF had exactly ONE store, in Camarillo Ca. In 40 years, I've set it up ONCE and checked it every few years; ZERO adjustments other than occasional blade clearance between the blade guide bearings - runs dead on. has cut every shape/size steel that'd fit in it up to 1x4 FB and 6" channel....
Wanted something bigger for a few more "serious" projects, so bought a Jet 8x12 - same story, set up once and use it. Among other things, built a modular roof (24'x24') over a 20' container. Gang cut up to 12 pieces of 2" square tube so they were all EXACTLY the same length, which let me drill evenly spaced holes near each end by setting up a vise/jig to put the holes 6" from each end, WITHOUT having to measure from the FAR end of each piece. Same story, set and forget.
BTW, I drilled all the holes with a 1/64" oversize annular cutter, and bolted all the finished sections together without having to "move" a single hole. The SMALLEST modules are 8' x 12'...
Decided I wanted an "offroad" saw (10 acres, some projects are NOT "shop size") - So I bought ANOTHER Hf 4x6 a couple years ago - made the mistake of NOT trying the saw BEFORE I built the base for it....
The newer saw has NEVER cut straight, or kept a blade on, or NOT leaked the oil out of the worm gearbox when vertical, or ANYTHING useful. It's still sitting in one of my containers waiting for its turn, most likely I'll put the OLD Taiwan one on that off-road base and ****-can the new one.
I did a few checks, and the OLD saw has CAST IRON blade guides - it's NEVER lost adjustment for the blade being perpendicular to the table.
The NEWER saw's blade guides are NOT magnetic, and I can FEEL the mounting screws start to STRIP when tightening them by hand, LONG BEFORE my nearly 60-year experienced hands (I'll be 76 in May) think they're snug enough - IMO, somebody decided that ease/cost of manufacturing was more important than actually WORKING.
My advice if someone thinks they want this type saw - take a small MAGNET with you, and actually check the one you're looking at - if the magnet does NOT stick to the blade guide bearing CASTINGS, WALK AWAY - I have NOT checked the Jet or Grizzly versions of the 4x6 (my Jet 8x12's guides ARE cast IRON) - but that may be one of MANY REASONS why the more expensive versions would be worth the difference.
One more thing - as an "add-on" to the two usable saws I already have, I'd welcome one of the pivoting saws for single cuts, especially odd angles - but if you envision doing any projects that require several IDENTICAL pieces cut at a time, you'd really appreciate the "normal" saws - even the little 4x6 can gang cut 6 pieces of 2" square tube at a time... Steve