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Looking for a chop saw

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dimichele

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Joined
Jan 21, 2008
Messages
101
Me too. Mine was recently stolen. I am thinking about the northern tool dry cut saw or the evolution.
 

sam.coll

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Joined
Oct 25, 2014
Messages
303
Location
Melbourne, Australia
Makita LC1230,more expensive than a traditional abrasive type saw but well worth the extra money. So good to not have to worry about the abrasive powder getting everywhere anymore not to mention quality burr free cuts
 

bob15

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Joined
Dec 8, 2011
Messages
6,863
Location
Northeasten, CT
I have this old 14" B&D (similar to below) that I bought for something like 30 bucks on C-list and it hasn't failed me yet. I don't see the need to spend serious money for a rudimentary tool.

746453.jpg
 

KWtech90

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Joined
Feb 28, 2016
Messages
149
Does any body make a chop saw with a high temp shutdown? We have burned up quite a few chop saws at work on thicker steel.
 

kursplat

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Jun 7, 2010
Messages
911
Location
S.Cal
is that evolution a chop saw or the cold cut saw? if my milwaukee ever dies that's what i'm moving to
 

Lelandwelds

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Joined
Sep 6, 2017
Messages
2,443
Location
Central Texas
I have several abrasive saws: Hitachi portable, an Everett, and a Brilliant. I have a Makita toothed chop saw. I used to have a 60 rpm cold saw. ( the best accuracy ever!)

I wish I had a mid size horizontal band saw like a Kalamazoo, DoAll or a HEM . My old bandsaw was the most reliable and cheapest per piece way to cut steel. Not even close.
 

NUTTSGT

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Joined
Sep 14, 2009
Messages
50,903
Location
Northern Central Ohio
The wife bought me a Milwaukee chop saw for Christmas something like 10 years ago and hasn't given me any problems. It'll probably last me another ten years or die one night when I'm trying to get a project finished.
 

tarbellb

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Joined
Apr 17, 2011
Messages
5,743
Location
Oregon
I would say the ONLY Evo saw worth buying is the DRY CUT 15" EvoSaw380. It was a great dry cut saw and well worth the lower price.

If going abrasive, look at the Milwaukee, one of the few with a cast not stamped base and fence iirc.

If you want the best chop saw below a cold cut ie under $3k, it seems the MK Morse dry cut with blade stabilizers and all around quality construction is the best bet. And not much more then the Evo.

Edited: accidently ref the Rage2, the EvoSaw380 is the model that gets my vote. see post #15.
 
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tarbellb

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Apr 17, 2011
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Oregon
My mistake, there is some confusion with the Evolution line of dry cut saws.
There are two saws that fall in the dry cut 14"+ category.

Rage2 and the EvoSaw380

The EvoSaw380 is the better saw, and the only one worth considering imo.


Why? Simply the 380 offers much better construction, and the price reflects that.

Base- 380 has a heavy, cast aluminum base vs Rage2 stamped steel

Fence- 380 has a cast and machined fence vs Rage2 stamped steel

Vise- 380 features a quick release and again, cast machined aluminum vs stamped steel.

Handle- 380 has a more ergonomic horizontal handle vs Rage2 traditional D handle

The 380 also has better chip collection, but lets not fool ourselves, they go everywhere still.

Finally the 380 weighs in 55lbs vs 43lbs for the Rage 2.

These saws and the carbide tipped blades depend on a rigid, non flexing platform to give accurate cuts and reduce blade wear. You know what happens when your piece moves, even a little with a 15" carbide blade spinning at 1400+rpms... you loose teeth and accuracy.
With cutting tools, heavy = rigid = accuracy, stamped steel is a compromise.

Rage2

2yvtnr4.jpg


EvoSaw380

246l9is.jpg
 

Mohawk Dave

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Joined
Oct 7, 2012
Messages
5,068
Location
SoCal
Unless you're doing real heavy stock, I recommend the Klutch bandsaw.

I have a Steelmax 14" dry cut and never pull it out anymore.
 

dogdog

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Joined
Nov 15, 2011
Messages
12,711
Don't get the Rage2... It *****.. mine ***** big time... 2 blades chipped teeth, clamping system *****, and it doesn't cut true after about 20 or 30 cuts on an new blade.

Evo380 or Mk Morse would be my next one if I am looking for a dry cut saw...

When I was at the steel supplier they had a Dewalt with abrasive blade, that cuts really straight. Not sure which model... probably an industrial model.
 

roche

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Joined
Mar 27, 2012
Messages
87
Makita LC1230,more expensive than a traditional abrasive type saw but well worth the extra money. So good to not have to worry about the abrasive powder getting everywhere anymore not to mention quality burr free cuts

this
 

BukitCase

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Joined
Apr 11, 2017
Messages
1,075
Location
Oregon
tarbellb, I'd like to know if you're STILL happy with the evosaw380 - I was about to have Lowes order one (not in stock) - with my military discount it's about $20 cheaper than anywhere else.

Then I read one of the few reviews on their site; 2 "wows" and a "don't bother", that one claimed the motor bushings don't hold up. I'm just curious if that's a fluke or if others have had that problem. I know the REST of the saw seems real solid, I "kicked a tire" at the local tool place but they won't budge off the RETAIL price, I could get an extra blade for the difference...

Anyway, I'd love to hear your latest opinion now that you've had it a while - thanks... Steve
 

BukitCase

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Apr 11, 2017
Messages
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Location
Oregon
Nevermind; I watched 3-4 vids on it, didn't see anything that'd piss me off much so ordered it thru Lowes - military discount puts it $20 cheaper than anywhere else on the net. It'll be here in a week... Steve
 

tarbellb

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Apr 17, 2011
Messages
5,743
Location
Oregon
Ha, im a sucker that always clicks the dry cut / cold saw / chop saw threads....


I had the Evo 380 for about 2-2.5yrs with heavy use. Sold it when I "upgraded" to the 14" Hitachi model, and thats after using most all the others out there.

Its still one of my more favorite 14 dry cut saws after all these years. I had zero mfg defect issues, only blade changes and fencing tuning. I went through maybe 12+ blades, about 300-600 (conservatively) cuts each.

So yeah, I still recommend it.

When I got mine I scribed true 90 and 45 into the painted top for the fence, its a great quick reference. But always grab your speed square to check if its critical.

enjoy
 

BukitCase

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Apr 11, 2017
Messages
1,075
Location
Oregon
Thanks, I'm sure I WILL enjoy - been wanting to add to the "saw stable" for a few years, now my Jet 7x12 bandsaw's not cutting straight no matter WHAT I do, it's seriously looking like the bow itself is bent (too much tension, left that way for over a year) - a new bow is $375, but I can't take the time to completely strip the OLD one and get it dialed back in til things slow down a bit.

So for now, I'll do some with the old taiwanese HF 4x6 (still cuts straight after 35 years) and the rest with the dry cut, save the complete rebuild on the Jet for crappy weather INDOOR projects... Steve
 

ReggieR

Banned
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Jun 21, 2018
Messages
331
Location
Vinton
is that evolution a chop saw or the cold cut saw? if my milwaukee ever dies that's what i'm moving to
A "cold cut saw" is generally a super low rpm liquid cooled affair that machine shops use.
A " chop saw" generally refers to a wood butchers saw or an abrasive steel cutting saw used on construction sites for steel studs and rebar.
The dry cut saw is a mid rpm <2000 that is used by welders and fabricators of metals.The " cold saw" confusion stems from the fact that the dry saw generally leaves metal warm to cool to the touch after cutting....unless it's heavy or lots of repeat cuts are done on one piece....like cutting 1/4" wall tube in 3-4 inch long pieces rapidly....then some heat will accumulate.
Dry saws are a beautiful thing. Make sure it has a cast base and a good vise. Evolution has a stamped junker but also a good one. Not sure which is which but pay a little more for a Makita, Slugger or other high end rig for longer blade life due to less vibration and more stability.
 
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ReggieR

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Joined
Jun 21, 2018
Messages
331
Location
Vinton
OH. Then there comes the " wet saw" confusion since the steel cutting " cold saw" is also " wet" but the wet saw in shop talk is generally a water flooded diamond grit edged thingie for stone and ceramic.
 
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