dfndr
Well-known member
Anyone use this in their small garage shop? How do you like it? Pleased with investment?
A buddy of mine has one. We found it will shut off with pressure treated lumber due to the moisture content. But other than that, he loves it.
Interesting to see. I use a Makita table saw but Saw stop has intrigued me.
I bought the original sawstop jobsite saw a few weeks ago while it was on sale for $999. I haven't used it a lot, bit for a few dozen rips I've made so far I'm happy with it. I have a Festool track saw for breaking down plywood so the fence will rarely be set at more than 12" in my shop. I will also generally use the track saw to crosscut anything sizable, so that limitation is also not relevant to my use case. The limited space in front of the blade is noticable though - if it wasn't for the sale I would have paid $100 more for the new jobsite pro saw to get an additional 2" of table in front of the blade.
I haven't ripped any wet or pressure treated lumber yet. If I do I have no problem putting the saw in bypass during those cuts to avoid any risk of false trips.
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How is that blade lift on the jobsite saw? Can you sneak up on say a 1/32"
It seems like it might move too fast?
For example I make half laps on a tablesaw, and usually cut a little shallow then sneak up on it and recut both sides until perfect.
It's sensitive, but doable. I was able to place a dado stack at the exact height I wanted it using mine, took some back and forth and patience. The flip side is non-exact measurements like adjusting the blade to cut different thicknesses of ply are very fast and easy.
That makes sense.
It would be a huge time saver for a jobsite.
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It just shuts off, doesn't jam the blade. It displayed a code indicating wet wood.
I don’t know how a circular saw accident relates to a question about an outfeed table for a job site table saw...but I agree, power tools can be dangerous!
First of all, I'm always amazed at the number of people who jump onto sawstop threads proclaiming you can't rip pressure treated lumber as if that is something anyone would reasonably want to do. I have to say such comments can be safely ignored.
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