Pc

"PghWoodWorker"

16/02/2006 1:01 PM

Compound miter saws?

I am considering whether or not to get a Chicago Electric Power Tools
12" Sliding compound miter saw, as it is going for only $179. The
dewalt (which is the brand most of my power tools are) equivilent is
about $600.

Should I go for the Chicago or get a cheaper 10" non sliding from
dewalt?

Does anyone have any experience with the Chicago miter saws?


This topic has 16 replies

Pc

"PghWoodWorker"

in reply to "PghWoodWorker" on 16/02/2006 1:01 PM

20/02/2006 10:38 AM

I just check back on my post to find all these replies. Thank you all
for your help. After reading you posts, I think I am going to opt for
a name brand as I am doing inside trim work mostly with it, and I
don't want poor cuts (that is what I am dealing with now as I am using
a 10 year old Makita 10" non-compound miter).

I am going to get a 12", but should I go for the big-bucks and get the
sliding compound 12", and if so why?

LL

"Locutus"

in reply to "PghWoodWorker" on 16/02/2006 1:01 PM

16/02/2006 5:02 PM


"leonard" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> You get what you pay for.that said I have one and for the past 5 years it
> works well for rough cutting (no cabinet or furniture grades
> cuts)lumber.the blade was replaced with a forest chopmaster(I know,blade
> cost more than the saw)and works ok but the arbor has a slight wobble to
> it.did alright on my deck and some exterior molding.But I have a bosch and
> the difference is dramatic( yugo vs maybach) hopes this helps
>
>
> len
>

I wouldn't think your arbor shouldn't have wobble in it regardless of brand.
Was this present when you purchased it, or did it develop over time?

LL

"Locutus"

in reply to "PghWoodWorker" on 16/02/2006 1:01 PM

16/02/2006 5:35 PM


"leonard" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> it was present when I purchased it. the wobble is small

I would have returned it!

Of course I have a Craftsman Miter saw which doesn't cut square when in the
zero position... and I can't figure out any way to adjust it. But I didn't
notice it when I was using it to cut deck boards, by the time I noticed it,
it was too late to return.

EP

"Edwin Pawlowski"

in reply to "PghWoodWorker" on 16/02/2006 1:01 PM

17/02/2006 3:14 AM


"Locutus" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>
> I would have returned it!
>

Right, and with the refund you'd buy a good saw instead.

RP

"Ranger Paul"

in reply to "PghWoodWorker" on 16/02/2006 1:01 PM

16/02/2006 8:13 PM

I have the DeWalt DW703 10" non sliding miter saw and it ran me about 200
bucks as I recall. It cuts well and square, no wobble. Its a good miter saw,
I'd buy it again.

I do furniture grade cross cutting on my table saw with a Jointech
SmartMiter sled. That gives me perfection at any angle every time.

It all depends on what you are planning to do. If you are thinking about
woodworking/furniture making or construction work. If you are aiming for
woodworking I don't know that anyone needs a miter saw. I'd save my pennys
and get a good table saw and the Jointech SmartMiter for cross cuts and
miters.

If you plan on construction and you plan on cross cutting/miter cutting
stock wider than 6" a 10" miter saw wont do. You would have to get a 12"
miter saw. A slider of course increases the width of stock you can cross cut
even more.

If you do opt for a 12" slider type miter saw, take a look at the one Bosch
makes, it ususally beats the DeWalt in side by side tests in the magazines
and online. And I belive the Bosch is about 50 - 60 bucks cheaper on Amazon.

Hope this helps,

RRRangerPaul

"Not everything that can be counted counts; and not everything that counts
can be counted." Albert Einstein



"PghWoodWorker" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I am considering whether or not to get a Chicago Electric Power Tools
> 12" Sliding compound miter saw, as it is going for only $179. The
> dewalt (which is the brand most of my power tools are) equivilent is
> about $600.
>
> Should I go for the Chicago or get a cheaper 10" non sliding from
> dewalt?
>
> Does anyone have any experience with the Chicago miter saws?
>

Th

"TH"

in reply to "PghWoodWorker" on 16/02/2006 1:01 PM

24/02/2006 12:18 AM

I have a 12" Bosch and wouldn't trade it for anything else.

"PghWoodWorker" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I am considering whether or not to get a Chicago Electric Power Tools
> 12" Sliding compound miter saw, as it is going for only $179. The
> dewalt (which is the brand most of my power tools are) equivilent is
> about $600.
>
> Should I go for the Chicago or get a cheaper 10" non sliding from
> dewalt?
>
> Does anyone have any experience with the Chicago miter saws?
>

JC

"James \"Cubby\" Culbertson"

in reply to "PghWoodWorker" on 16/02/2006 1:01 PM

16/02/2006 8:47 PM


"PghWoodWorker" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I am considering whether or not to get a Chicago Electric Power Tools
> 12" Sliding compound miter saw, as it is going for only $179. The
> dewalt (which is the brand most of my power tools are) equivilent is
> about $600.
>
> Should I go for the Chicago or get a cheaper 10" non sliding from
> dewalt?
>
> Does anyone have any experience with the Chicago miter saws?
>

I went this route:

http://www.tylertool.com/malsre.html

and am pretty happy with it.
Cheers,
cc

DD

David

in reply to "PghWoodWorker" on 16/02/2006 1:01 PM

16/02/2006 1:14 PM

PghWoodWorker wrote:

> I am considering whether or not to get a Chicago Electric Power Tools
> 12" Sliding compound miter saw, as it is going for only $179. The
> dewalt (which is the brand most of my power tools are) equivilent is
> about $600.
>
> Should I go for the Chicago or get a cheaper 10" non sliding from
> dewalt?
>
> Does anyone have any experience with the Chicago miter saws?
>
First of all the $600 Dewalt is not an "equivalent". LOL!

If you don't need a slider, the cheaper 10" from DeWalt would be the FAR
better choice. or a Makita

Dave

Cs

"CW"

in reply to "PghWoodWorker" on 16/02/2006 1:01 PM

18/02/2006 3:16 AM

No, most surgical instruments are made in Pakistan.

"Edwin Pawlowski" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> "Locutus" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> >
> > I wouldn't think your arbor shouldn't have wobble in it regardless of
> > brand.
>
> Exactly, but that is how HF can buy and sell so cheap. They buy cheaply
> made stuff. Good saws don't have wobble. The tolerances on cheap tools is
> much greater that on quality tools. I'd bet that anyone going into
surgery
> would not want the doctor to bring out a toolkit from Harbor Freight.
>
>

lt

"leonard"

in reply to "PghWoodWorker" on 16/02/2006 1:01 PM

16/02/2006 5:33 PM

it was present when I purchased it. the wobble is small

lt

"leonard"

in reply to "PghWoodWorker" on 16/02/2006 1:01 PM

16/02/2006 4:51 PM

You get what you pay for.that said I have one and for the past 5 years it
works well for rough cutting (no cabinet or furniture grades cuts)lumber.the
blade was replaced with a forest chopmaster(I know,blade cost more than the
saw)and works ok but the arbor has a slight wobble to it.did alright on my
deck and some exterior molding.But I have a bosch and the difference is
dramatic( yugo vs maybach) hopes this helps


len

dF

dnoyeB

in reply to "PghWoodWorker" on 16/02/2006 1:01 PM

16/02/2006 5:49 PM

PghWoodWorker wrote:
> I am considering whether or not to get a Chicago Electric Power Tools
> 12" Sliding compound miter saw, as it is going for only $179. The
> dewalt (which is the brand most of my power tools are) equivilent is
> about $600.
>
> Should I go for the Chicago or get a cheaper 10" non sliding from
> dewalt?
>
> Does anyone have any experience with the Chicago miter saws?
>

i got a 10" compound miter saw refurbished from tylertool.com

I like it.

--
Thank you,



"Then said I, Wisdom [is] better than strength: nevertheless the poor
man's wisdom [is] despised, and his words are not heard." Ecclesiastes 9:16

EP

"Edwin Pawlowski"

in reply to "PghWoodWorker" on 16/02/2006 1:01 PM

17/02/2006 3:17 AM


"Locutus" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>
> I wouldn't think your arbor shouldn't have wobble in it regardless of
> brand.

Exactly, but that is how HF can buy and sell so cheap. They buy cheaply
made stuff. Good saws don't have wobble. The tolerances on cheap tools is
much greater that on quality tools. I'd bet that anyone going into surgery
would not want the doctor to bring out a toolkit from Harbor Freight.

RS

"Rick Samuel"

in reply to "PghWoodWorker" on 16/02/2006 1:01 PM

18/02/2006 10:25 AM

If you buy HF power tools, buy in person, not on-line. Check out each tool
first. QC is very sporadic,

EP

"Edwin Pawlowski"

in reply to "PghWoodWorker" on 16/02/2006 1:01 PM

20/02/2006 8:26 PM


"PghWoodWorker" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>
> I am going to get a 12", but should I go for the big-bucks and get the
> sliding compound 12", and if so why?

The slider gives you more capacity for wider cuts. I could not justify it
myself, but maybe you can. I've read that they are not as accurate because
of the mechanism, but I don't have personal experience with it. FWIW, I
have a DeWalt. The stock 80T blade after being resharpened by Ridge Carbide
is very good. No reason to step up to anything else.
--
Ed
http://pages.cthome.net/edhome/


Pn

Phisherman

in reply to "PghWoodWorker" on 16/02/2006 1:01 PM

17/02/2006 2:18 AM

On 16 Feb 2006 13:01:26 -0800, "PghWoodWorker" <[email protected]>
wrote:

>I am considering whether or not to get a Chicago Electric Power Tools
>12" Sliding compound miter saw, as it is going for only $179. The
>dewalt (which is the brand most of my power tools are) equivilent is
>about $600.
>
>Should I go for the Chicago or get a cheaper 10" non sliding from
>dewalt?
>
>Does anyone have any experience with the Chicago miter saws?


I have the DeWalt 12" chop saw and it has served me exceedingly well.
This saw has a high back fence which really comes in handy for
installing crown moldings. I do not recommend Chicago power tools.


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