"Mike in Mystic" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I saw this one demoed at a woodworking show:
>
> http://www.bladepoint.com/
One thing I don't like about this type of laser guide is that it's only
operated when the saw blade is spinning. While I haven't yet tried one, it
seems like having to turn on the saw before lining up the cut would be
somewhat self-defeating. Are there any lasers with a separate on switch
like you'd find on the newer Delta saw, for example, that don't require the
blade to be spinning first?
>
> I was going to buy one, but the guy was too busy selling them and I had to
> leave. The demo was very impressive, and it really seems like this could
> improve accuracy and save time (by removing the need to sneak up on cuts,
> for one thing).
>
> I'm still planning to get one, but for now I don't have any first hand
> experience.
>
> Mike
> "JT @yahoo.com>" <jrt2hoo<REMOVE THIS> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>> 1) What is this groups opion of the Laser Guide options for Chop Saws?
>> Are they worth having and do they really work?
>>
>> 2) Which is better, a single side or dual sided guide?
>>
>> 3) Who makes the best AFTER MARKET Laser Guide?
>
>
On Tue, 25 Jan 2005 14:48:39 -0800, TeamCasa <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> I would never buy anything from someone who states ALL SALES ARE FINAL--NO
> REFUNDS on their website.
Agreed, but if you pay by credit card, and they sell you junk, you can
have the charge reversed. But yes, I'd buy from anyone else first if I
could.
Dave Hinz wrote:
>
> On Tue, 25 Jan 2005 14:48:39 -0800, TeamCasa <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> > I would never buy anything from someone who states ALL SALES ARE FINAL--NO
> > REFUNDS on their website.
>
> Agreed, but if you pay by credit card, and they sell you junk, you can
> have the charge reversed. But yes, I'd buy from anyone else first if I
> could.
Well, there could be a problem if it works as they say it should but
you're just not happy...not at all sure that would qualify unequivocally
under the Fair Credit Act provisions for a guaranteed refund.
> http://www.bladepoint.com/
>
> I was going to buy one, but the guy was too busy selling them and I had to
> leave. The demo was very impressive, and it really seems like this could
> improve accuracy and save time (by removing the need to sneak up on cuts,
> for one thing).
>
> I'm still planning to get one, but for now I don't have any first hand
> experience.
>
> Mike
I would never buy anything from someone who states ALL SALES ARE FINAL--NO
REFUNDS on their website.
Dave
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> Are there any lasers with a separate on switch
> like you'd find on the newer Delta saw, for example, that don't require
the
> blade to be spinning first?
Yes, there is the Laserkerf laser.
Here is a detailed review:
http://www.onlinetoolreviews.com/reviews/laserkerf.htm
Hope that helps!
--
Regards,
Dean Bielanowski
Editor,
Online Tool Reviews
http://www.onlinetoolreviews.com
Over 70 woodworking product reviews online!
------------------------------------------------------------
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"JT @yahoo.com>" <jrt2hoo<REMOVE THIS> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> 1) What is this groups opion of the Laser Guide options for Chop Saws?
> Are they worth having and do they really work?
>
> 2) Which is better, a single side or dual sided guide?
>
> 3) Who makes the best AFTER MARKET Laser Guide?
Isn't this the exact same post that made the rounds here a month or so ago?
--
-Mike-
[email protected]
The one on the delta does not mount to the blade so it can have a switch. I
have both the blade point and a separate one and both have their advantages.
The separately mounted one has the advantage of a separate switch so it can
be turned on whenever. The down sides are finding a good place to mount it,
keeping it aligned, keeping it clean. The advantage of the blade point will
mount to just about any saw and requires no alignment. It is also much
brighter than my separately mounted one. The downsides are that they run on
batteries that will need to be replaced, the saw has to run for it to work,
the light is actually to the left of the actual cut line. I personally
find the blade point to be a good unit that works well. All you really need
to do is just tap the trigger to get it to come on and with the saw in the
fully up position, the blade guard will protect you from the spinning blade.
I also bought a blade point for my RAS and it made aligning it a dream.
--
If at first you don't succeed, you're not cut out for skydiving
"Mike Pio" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:15EJd.19270$xu.5493@fed1read05...
>
> "Mike in Mystic" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
> >I saw this one demoed at a woodworking show:
> >
> > http://www.bladepoint.com/
>
> One thing I don't like about this type of laser guide is that it's only
> operated when the saw blade is spinning. While I haven't yet tried one,
it
> seems like having to turn on the saw before lining up the cut would be
> somewhat self-defeating. Are there any lasers with a separate on switch
> like you'd find on the newer Delta saw, for example, that don't require
the
> blade to be spinning first?
>
> >
> > I was going to buy one, but the guy was too busy selling them and I had
to
> > leave. The demo was very impressive, and it really seems like this
could
> > improve accuracy and save time (by removing the need to sneak up on
cuts,
> > for one thing).
> >
> > I'm still planning to get one, but for now I don't have any first hand
> > experience.
> >
> > Mike
> > "JT @yahoo.com>" <jrt2hoo<REMOVE THIS> wrote in message
> > news:[email protected]...
> >> 1) What is this groups opion of the Laser Guide options for Chop Saws?
> >> Are they worth having and do they really work?
> >>
> >> 2) Which is better, a single side or dual sided guide?
> >>
> >> 3) Who makes the best AFTER MARKET Laser Guide?
> >
> >
>
>
I saw this one demoed at a woodworking show:
http://www.bladepoint.com/
I was going to buy one, but the guy was too busy selling them and I had to
leave. The demo was very impressive, and it really seems like this could
improve accuracy and save time (by removing the need to sneak up on cuts,
for one thing).
I'm still planning to get one, but for now I don't have any first hand
experience.
Mike
"JT @yahoo.com>" <jrt2hoo<REMOVE THIS> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> 1) What is this groups opion of the Laser Guide options for Chop Saws?
> Are they worth having and do they really work?
>
> 2) Which is better, a single side or dual sided guide?
>
> 3) Who makes the best AFTER MARKET Laser Guide?
My opinion is that lasers are unnecessary. I can get on target if i use my
"good eye" and only have to sneak up once more or so from there. My only
experience with using lasers was the standard unit on the Hitachi and Delta
CMS. Both seemed to worked equally well, but i thought, and still think,
lasers are more gimmicky than useful. --dave
"Mike Marlow" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> "JT @yahoo.com>" <jrt2hoo<REMOVE THIS> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>> 1) What is this groups opion of the Laser Guide options for Chop Saws?
>> Are they worth having and do they really work?
>>
>> 2) Which is better, a single side or dual sided guide?
>>
>> 3) Who makes the best AFTER MARKET Laser Guide?
>
> Isn't this the exact same post that made the rounds here a month or so
> ago?
> --
>
> -Mike-
> [email protected]
>
>
>