After looking at lots of saws on Marketplace I decided to get this Dewalt 925. Lesser known to me than the legendary MBF, it was the successor to that saw and, according to a guy on YouTube, an even better saw. So when I saw this one about an hour away I got it. The guy asked $100 for it. When I got there and saw that he was selling off stuff because of a divorce, I didn't have the heart to barter with him. He and his brother put the saw in my car, so it was all good.
I didn't find out how heavy even a small RAS is until I got home and went to pull it out of my car. I ended up taking it apart in order to have parts light enough to carry down to my shop. But that made it easier to clean out all the old grease and dirt, so it wasn't wasted effort. The good news is everything was in good shape. The head slides smoothy in the arm, the motor runs smoothly, and all the knobs and parts are there. A little light rust in some places on the frame, but nothing bad.
I couldn't salvage the original table, so I made a new one. I put three metal bars in it to make sure it stays flat. I had never seen a fold down front section until I saw the one on this saw. It came that way from the factory so I included it on the new one. If you raise the front section and rotate to the saw head to the out rip position, it will rip a little wider than 25". I don't plan to use it for that, but it's impressive that even such a little saw can do that. Crosscut capacity is 12"+ with the fence in the forward position, and about 15" if you move it back.
Here it is on it's temporary stand.
After I got everything adjusted, I gave it a test drive. Plenty of power on 3/4" thick maple and zips through 3/4" plywood with the 8-1/2" Oshlum 60 tooth blade I have on it. Beautiful, chipout free cuts on both.
The reason I got this saw was because of problems I've had with my CMS getting smile free 45 deg cuts in hard maple, etc, despite trying several blades. So that was the benchmark test.
Mission accomplished. Now to find it a permanent home.
John
I didn't find out how heavy even a small RAS is until I got home and went to pull it out of my car. I ended up taking it apart in order to have parts light enough to carry down to my shop. But that made it easier to clean out all the old grease and dirt, so it wasn't wasted effort. The good news is everything was in good shape. The head slides smoothy in the arm, the motor runs smoothly, and all the knobs and parts are there. A little light rust in some places on the frame, but nothing bad.
I couldn't salvage the original table, so I made a new one. I put three metal bars in it to make sure it stays flat. I had never seen a fold down front section until I saw the one on this saw. It came that way from the factory so I included it on the new one. If you raise the front section and rotate to the saw head to the out rip position, it will rip a little wider than 25". I don't plan to use it for that, but it's impressive that even such a little saw can do that. Crosscut capacity is 12"+ with the fence in the forward position, and about 15" if you move it back.
Here it is on it's temporary stand.
After I got everything adjusted, I gave it a test drive. Plenty of power on 3/4" thick maple and zips through 3/4" plywood with the 8-1/2" Oshlum 60 tooth blade I have on it. Beautiful, chipout free cuts on both.
The reason I got this saw was because of problems I've had with my CMS getting smile free 45 deg cuts in hard maple, etc, despite trying several blades. So that was the benchmark test.
Mission accomplished. Now to find it a permanent home.
John