What’s a good basic table saw? I look at them online and can’t really tell much a difference. I’m tempted to just get a harbor freight one but know the fence will probably be loose and other annoyances…

Anyone have a specific recommendation for someone who is only occasionally playing around with simple carpentry?

  • Nomecks
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    68 months ago

    I’d recommend ignoring this pile of thousand dollar saw gate keepers and go buy a used Bosch portable saw. You can probably score one for like 150 bucks. This thread is full of people with too much money. Thousand dollar saw for a hobbyist who occasionally does woodwork. What a joke these recommendations are. Go have fun and probably don’t ask for beginner help on here again.

    • @SoleInvictus
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      8 months ago

      Bingo. My first table saw was a heavily used Ryobi direct drive. It was noisy at hell and hard to use with precision, but it only cost $25 and helped me figure out if I wanted to get into woodworking or not.

      Seriously, if you’re just getting into this, you don’t need to drop $1000+ on a SawStop. If you have the money, fuck yeah, get one. If not, just use proper technique, tools, and PPE. Be extremely careful as even the cheapest, most underpowered saw will take multiple fingers off in less than a second. If you’re not scared, get scared. I’ve been doing this for over a decade and my table saw still makes me wary. That’s a good thing.

    • Onions Sliced Thin
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      27 months ago

      I’ve been really happy with my Bosch 4100, but it did take me a while to properly align the arbor with the miter slots. I’ve been using it on-and-off for about 7-ish years, and I’m only recently considering to upgrade to a Sawstop.

    • @[email protected]
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      28 months ago

      I got a Bosch new and it was something like 500 bucks. For a table saw that seems like a reasonable price to me.