Replacement for a Crappy Saw
Posted: Sun Apr 18, 2021 3:10 pm
So in 2015 I bought a new Craftsman table saw. My dad bought Craftsman stuff when I was growing up. Heck I have a lot of decent hand tools from them. Guess where this saw was made. Yep. Chinese junk is just that from day 1. It's actually possible to set the guide slightly crooked when you clamp it down, no kidding. The cuts were awful and it was horribly loud. Kept spinning for days after you shut it off.
I've hated this thing for almost 6 years now. You do the mental flip-flop, "Do I really NEED a new saw." Well no, this one still works.
Fortunately, this one finally died. It's direct drive with the motor so I think that's what eventually killed it. Found on the CL a nice old 'merican made Toolkraft one from the 1950s for a couple hundred. Fabbed up my own stand and powder coated it myself. Real metal gears and solid cast iron. Weighs a lot. It is so smooth there's no kick when it starts, running it, nor when it shuts off.
The quality of cut is waaaaay better. Left cut in the picture with burn marks was with the Chinese saw, other with the Darra James unit.
I've hated this thing for almost 6 years now. You do the mental flip-flop, "Do I really NEED a new saw." Well no, this one still works.
Fortunately, this one finally died. It's direct drive with the motor so I think that's what eventually killed it. Found on the CL a nice old 'merican made Toolkraft one from the 1950s for a couple hundred. Fabbed up my own stand and powder coated it myself. Real metal gears and solid cast iron. Weighs a lot. It is so smooth there's no kick when it starts, running it, nor when it shuts off.
The quality of cut is waaaaay better. Left cut in the picture with burn marks was with the Chinese saw, other with the Darra James unit.