jJ

01/03/2004 12:48 PM

ryobi bts15

My local Home Depot has a new Ryobi saw on display. It's called a
BTS15, and looks like the BTS10, but with a sliding table. The demo
that they had setup was pretty impressive for a $169 machine. It has
the sliding table, a real throat plate (one of my biggest complaints
with all benchtop models), and extension rails for a 20" (or so)
ripping capacity. I was in a real hurry, and haven't gotten back
there yet to look more closely.
Anyone know about this saw? I haven't found squat on the web about
it. I'm sure it's the same universal motor, so it'll still be as loud
as any benchtop. And there's a lot of plastic (I believe the whole
tabletop was plastic!), but it's by far the best looking benchtop I've
seen in terms of features...

I'll probably still buy a real contractors saw next, but I have to
admit I'm tempted by cheap things. (I know, I know, cry once...) And
I move a lot, so portable is always a good thing. :)


This topic has 1 replies

Kk

"KYHighlander"

in reply to [email protected] (Jeff) on 01/03/2004 12:48 PM

01/03/2004 8:21 PM

does it have a miter slot? If not then pass, most jigs need that slot. I
had a Ryobi BT3000 and the shims fell out of it on the second project I had
started. Without the shims the blade couldn't be raised or lowered. You also
had to buy an accessory to get a miter slot on one side, you really need one
on both sides of the blade.

--

http://users.adelphia.net/~kyhighland


"Jeff" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> My local Home Depot has a new Ryobi saw on display. It's called a
> BTS15, and looks like the BTS10, but with a sliding table. The demo
> that they had setup was pretty impressive for a $169 machine. It has
> the sliding table, a real throat plate (one of my biggest complaints
> with all benchtop models), and extension rails for a 20" (or so)
> ripping capacity. I was in a real hurry, and haven't gotten back
> there yet to look more closely.
> Anyone know about this saw? I haven't found squat on the web about
> it. I'm sure it's the same universal motor, so it'll still be as loud
> as any benchtop. And there's a lot of plastic (I believe the whole
> tabletop was plastic!), but it's by far the best looking benchtop I've
> seen in terms of features...
>
> I'll probably still buy a real contractors saw next, but I have to
> admit I'm tempted by cheap things. (I know, I know, cry once...) And
> I move a lot, so portable is always a good thing. :)


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