circular saw conundrum - Printable Version +- Woodnet Forums (https://www.forums.woodnet.net) +-- Thread: circular saw conundrum (/showthread.php?tid=7357133) |
circular saw conundrum - Wild Turkey - 08-10-2020 In the next couple of weeks I need to cut an old pool table slate into two or three pieces. Diamond blade in circular saw is my best bet but that brings us to the problem I have three circular saws: Craftsman that doesn't work (surprise ) Black and Decker that works but is pretty lightweight and a Milwaukee 6377 that needs a new worm gear ( bought it cheap since it needed work) So here's the problem -- do I bite the bullet and buy a new saw? If so, worm drive or not? I will only use it rarely, but I have a bad case of "Timitis" -- more power is always better I think the parts for the Milwaukee would be under $75 plus my own labor. "Standard" circular saw ~$125, worm drives ~$180 I may make a pass through a local pawn shop tomorrow What thinks the "brain trust"? RE: circular saw conundrum - stav - 08-10-2020 I'd look into fixing the Milwaukee if you can or watch Craigslist for a throw away maybe. RE: circular saw conundrum - ajkoontz - 08-10-2020 (08-10-2020, 05:41 PM)Wild Turkey Wrote: In the next couple of weeks I need to cut an old pool table slate into two or three pieces. Sounds like a good excuse to buy a tracksaw. RE: circular saw conundrum - Splinter Puller - 08-10-2020 I've cut hundreds of concrete pavers and dozens of yards of concrete expansion cracks with a diamond blade in a cheap old weak skillsaw I had. Slate is softer then concrete. RE: circular saw conundrum - Bill Holt - 08-10-2020 I am biased, love Milwaukee tools. My "good" saw is a Milwaukee (not a worm) heavy, and high amp. I would never use it on concrete or slate (too much hard dust). I have an old heavy duty DeWalt set up with the diamond blade and it has cut hundreds of feet. I am seventy five, there are no long, hard days ahead of me, but if I had the tools you mentioned, I would want a good reliable circular saw in the arsenal. Get you a new or almost new Milwaukee, you will not regret it. RE: circular saw conundrum - Stwood_ - 08-10-2020 I wouldn't put a good wood saw down for that job. Go buy a 40.00 throwaway saw and get-er-done RE: circular saw conundrum - fredhargis - 08-11-2020 What about just renting something that will do the job? (Then fix the Milwaukee for you to use on wood.) RE: circular saw conundrum - Wild Turkey - 08-11-2020 (08-11-2020, 05:17 AM)fredhargis Wrote: What about just renting something that will do the job? (Then fix the Milwaukee for you to use on wood.) not in my little town RE: circular saw conundrum - R Clark - 08-11-2020 Given the saws, and their conditions as you described, here's what I would do: Step 1. Throw away the not-working C-man. It's not worth the waste of precious gravity. Step 2. Put a diamond blade on the B&D and cut the slate. If it burns up, who cares? It can be replaced with another $20 cheapie for the next cr***y job quickly enough. Step 3. Fix the Milwaukee. RE: circular saw conundrum - brianwelch - 08-11-2020 I have picked up 2 7-1/4" worm drive circular saws from CL, 1 Milwaukee and 1 Skil, each at $25. Changed the oil in each, and now have a dedicated masonry saw (mounted a dry diamond blade) and a near bullet-proof saw for my wood butchery. Keep your eyes open on both Letgo and OfferUp as well... |