In the market for a compound miter saw

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rec
Posts: 381
Joined: Tue Jan 30, 2007 1:15 pm
Location: Virginia, C'Ville

In the market for a compound miter saw

#1 Post by rec »

Any suggestions on brand, features, etc. Mainly will be used for honey do projects. First use will be to cut baseboard molding for our den. I am
sure it will get used for speakers as well.....lol. I would like to stay in the $250 range. Should it be a 12" blade or 10"? Do I need a slider?
All opinions appreciated as the number of choices is a bit daunting :fruit:
My initials are in the view finder of every camcorder (REC)
2xOT12(Deltalite 2512 loaded, w/melded arrays)
2xOT12(Deltalite 2512 loaded, w/flat array) "In Process"
4xT30(24", 4012HO loaded)
1xAT

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Jon Barnhardt
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Re: In the market for a compound miter saw

#2 Post by Jon Barnhardt »

Max depth of cut determines if you need a slider.

I have a non sliding 12" miter saw and it has served me very well. It has about an 8" max depth of cut.

Most of your normal tool brands are good choices. Mine is a Menards brand and has worked fine for 5-6 years...

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LelandCrooks
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Location: Midwest/Kansas/Speaker Nirvana
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Re: In the market for a compound miter saw

#3 Post by LelandCrooks »

Screw that price. You need THIS!!!

http://www.boschtools.com/Products/Tool ... id=GCM12SD

Seriously badass. Zero clearance to the wall.
If it's too loud, you're even older than me! Like me.
http://www.speakerhardware.com

sandwichman
Posts: 32
Joined: Thu Jul 01, 2010 8:50 pm
Location: Peshtigo, WI

Re: In the market for a compound miter saw

#4 Post by sandwichman »

My father in law just got that bosch, it is seriously badass! He also has the bosch jobsite tablesaw, that rocks too.
2 24" Lab12 T48 (Many more on the way)
2 W8 (2 more on the way)
2 DR250

rec
Posts: 381
Joined: Tue Jan 30, 2007 1:15 pm
Location: Virginia, C'Ville

Re: In the market for a compound miter saw

#5 Post by rec »

Dang LeLand are you trying to get me divorced? Ha ha......that thing is bad azz.
Not sure I can justify the price....we shall see
My initials are in the view finder of every camcorder (REC)
2xOT12(Deltalite 2512 loaded, w/melded arrays)
2xOT12(Deltalite 2512 loaded, w/flat array) "In Process"
4xT30(24", 4012HO loaded)
1xAT

CoronaOperator
Posts: 1648
Joined: Wed Mar 25, 2009 7:07 pm
Location: Medicine Hat, Alberta, Canada

Re: In the market for a compound miter saw

#6 Post by CoronaOperator »

Since it looks like you"ll be new to a miter saw, I'll offer my $0.02

First off, all power tools should be used with caution. The miter saw is not only no exception, It will be one of your most dangerous tools in your collection! Its right up there with chainsaws and axes! The reason being that it is one of the few tools where the workpiece remains stationary but the very dangerous blade moves position. Your hands may be in a seemingly safe position when you start your cut, but be lying on the floor when you bring the handle down. Be careful and always have your work piece tight against the fence, make sure your finger isn't between the workpiece and the fence, use the clamps provided.
End of safety lesson but head it well.

Options:

Dual Bevel: You'll pay a huge premium for this option. There is nothing a dual bevel saw can do that a single bevel saw can't. With a single bevel saw you will be constanly fliping over your work piece to cut the other end to length (if your doing miters). Flipping 14' lengths of baseboard around in tight quarters to cut the other end is no fun. If your a contractor, get this option, if not, is it really worth the $200 premium to you?

10" vs 12": Again a premium but depends on your intended use. A 10" blade cannot cut a 4x4 fence post in half in one cut. If you are doing fencing, decks, etc you might want to go 12". Large diameter objects (over 3" thickness) and some methods of cutting crown molding (cut on the angle of instalation rather than cut flat with a bevel) may also neccesitate the 12" blade.

Sliding: Almost always worth this option on a 10" saw unless your strickly doing thin base molding or picture frames. On a 12" saw you may or may not need it. If you need to cut 2x8's or 2x10's for framing or for decks then get this option.

Lasers: Little bit gimicky but the better aligned ones can really save some time and material, especially for newbs if you have friends helping you out on your project.

Dust Collection: If your building fences you can easily fill up an extra large trash bag in a couple hours with one of these saws, If you don't want sawdust everywhere, don't plug one of these saws in! I think the built in dust collection bags is for WAF factor only.

That about everything I can think of.
Built:
17" width 10" driver Autotuba
2 x 29" width dual Lab12 Tuba60
6 x DR250 2510/asd1001
In progress:
2 x DR250 2510/asd1001
For best results, point the loud end of the array towards the audience

rec
Posts: 381
Joined: Tue Jan 30, 2007 1:15 pm
Location: Virginia, C'Ville

Re: In the market for a compound miter saw

#7 Post by rec »

Pulled the trigger on this bad boy yesterday
http://www.lowes.com/pd_42379-67702-C12 ... fo=Hitachi
My initials are in the view finder of every camcorder (REC)
2xOT12(Deltalite 2512 loaded, w/melded arrays)
2xOT12(Deltalite 2512 loaded, w/flat array) "In Process"
4xT30(24", 4012HO loaded)
1xAT

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LiefStevens
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Location: Asheville, NC - Authorized Builder
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Re: In the market for a compound miter saw

#8 Post by LiefStevens »

I was just checking that one out yesterday. I like that it can take up less space than most sliding 12" miter saws. Been reading a lot of reviews and trying to decide which miter to get. Let us know how you like it.

rec
Posts: 381
Joined: Tue Jan 30, 2007 1:15 pm
Location: Virginia, C'Ville

Re: In the market for a compound miter saw

#9 Post by rec »

CoronaOperator, thanks for all the info. I have much respect for anything with a spinning blade. Hopefully I will be trying it out this weekend and getting some baseboards cut. I will check back in and let everyone know how I like it. This saw may be a little over kill but you never know what projects may pop up now that I have it. It seems like just about the best bang for the buck.
My initials are in the view finder of every camcorder (REC)
2xOT12(Deltalite 2512 loaded, w/melded arrays)
2xOT12(Deltalite 2512 loaded, w/flat array) "In Process"
4xT30(24", 4012HO loaded)
1xAT

koturban
Posts: 172
Joined: Sun Feb 27, 2011 11:17 am
Location: Kincardine. ON

Re: In the market for a compound miter saw

#10 Post by koturban »

Been happy with myFestool Kapex

el_ingeniero
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Joined: Sun Jul 18, 2010 11:46 pm
Location: Minneapolis, MN

Re: In the market for a compound miter saw

#11 Post by el_ingeniero »

koturban wrote:Been happy with myFestool Kapex
Saw porn, or get out of here!

Chris Betancourt
Posts: 397
Joined: Fri Aug 08, 2008 2:44 pm
Location: Levittown Puerto Rico

Re: In the market for a compound miter saw

#12 Post by Chris Betancourt »

Got this one @ Sears for $160 and Im very happy with it.
GMC miter saw.jpg
Help me soooo much with my 16dr's built.
IMG00257-20110725-1412 (400x300).jpg
IMG00257-20110725-1412 (400x300).jpg (110.92 KiB) Viewed 2925 times
Christopher Betancourt
Authorized Builder
Puerto Rico
Built:
4xTitan 39-3012LF, 2xWedgehorn 8, 4xOT12, 8xOT12J on the works.
All running w/SAC or DL1606
On the table:
too much work!! LOL
Future:
It's a secret for now. Shhhh....

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thekl0wn
Posts: 75
Joined: Wed Apr 25, 2012 1:17 pm
Location: S. IN

Re: In the market for a compound miter saw

#13 Post by thekl0wn »

Buddy of mine just got that Hitachi. Seems very happy with it, though he doesn't do much in the way of trim carpentry. In all honesty, it looks like a lot nicer saw than the 12" DeWalt slider we have in the shop. I've hated that saw since day 1. Just has a cheap feeling to it, and the miters never stay zero'd. Pretty sure the only reason we went with it is because we have a friend that worked for a tool company and could get us deals on DeWalt crap.
Something Witty

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