I'm looking to buy a basic chopsaw. Use will be building benches and bookshelves and things like that. I have a 30 year old table saw, it's the smallest one that Sears made at the time that has served me well for years, but it can't come close to cutting a 4x4 in one pass.
The local Home Depot has 10" Dewalt, Rigid, and Ryobi in descending order of price. The Ryobi is a lot less than the Dewalt, $120 to $200, roughly.
There are a lot of "steps up" from there, 12" and then the ones that cut compound angles and ones that slide on tracks for cutting planks... topping out with $700 ones. At each size the hierarchy seems the same: Ryobi at the bottom price-wise, Rigid in the middle and Dewalt as the most expensive.
So my two questions:
* Is there some reason that someone who is not a furniture maker or house-building carpenter would really end up wanting one of these larger or more complex saws? (The biggest thing I can imagine building is a woodshed.)
* Are Dewalt power tools worth the premium. One buddy swears by Ryobi, and I take it that battery inter-change is a big factor. He recently bought a electric lawnmower that can use the same batter has his hand tools.
These saws all run on cabled electricity, so that's not an issue.
I notice the 12,000 replies on the "Milwaukee power tools" thread, so it seems like Dewalt isn't necessarily the most loved brand for battery compatible power tool lines.
The local Home Depot has 10" Dewalt, Rigid, and Ryobi in descending order of price. The Ryobi is a lot less than the Dewalt, $120 to $200, roughly.
There are a lot of "steps up" from there, 12" and then the ones that cut compound angles and ones that slide on tracks for cutting planks... topping out with $700 ones. At each size the hierarchy seems the same: Ryobi at the bottom price-wise, Rigid in the middle and Dewalt as the most expensive.
So my two questions:
* Is there some reason that someone who is not a furniture maker or house-building carpenter would really end up wanting one of these larger or more complex saws? (The biggest thing I can imagine building is a woodshed.)
* Are Dewalt power tools worth the premium. One buddy swears by Ryobi, and I take it that battery inter-change is a big factor. He recently bought a electric lawnmower that can use the same batter has his hand tools.
These saws all run on cabled electricity, so that's not an issue.
I notice the 12,000 replies on the "Milwaukee power tools" thread, so it seems like Dewalt isn't necessarily the most loved brand for battery compatible power tool lines.

