I finally got a chance to check out the 12" Makita slider alongside the
other contenders such as PC, Bosch, and DeWalt 718. The Makita wins
hands down the title of most rigid assembly (and it slides almost as
well as the new Bosch). The PC is the next best, the Dewalt I rate 3rd,
and the Bosch is loosey-goosey--too much flex! That's a shame, because
otherwise the Bosch looks well thought out, and it slides effortlessly.
The Bosch , like the DeWalt has a drive belt.
Dave
"David" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I finally got a chance to check out the 12" Makita slider alongside the
>other contenders such as PC, Bosch, and DeWalt 718. The Makita wins hands
>down the title of most rigid assembly (and it slides almost as well as the
>new Bosch). The PC is the next best, the Dewalt I rate 3rd, and the Bosch
>is loosey-goosey--too much flex! That's a shame, because otherwise the
>Bosch looks well thought out, and it slides effortlessly. The Bosch , like
>the DeWalt has a drive belt.
>
> Dave
The DW718 that I tried at Lowe's certainly did not feel loose.
Jim
Dave,
What I'm wondering is, where did you try them and who assembled them?
If you're talking about some store that had all those saws on display,
assembled by one or two minimum-wage people who had time to get the
first three assembled and adjusted right but got told to get the lead
out for the last one, which was a Bosch, I have to wonder if the test
might be a little questionable. At the very least, if one of them felt
all loosey goosey, I'd want to check and see if anything needed a
little righty tighty.
On Fri, 11 Nov 2005 17:34:09 -0800, David <[email protected]> wrote:
>I finally got a chance to check out the 12" Makita slider alongside the=20
>other contenders such as PC, Bosch, and DeWalt 718. The Makita wins=20
>hands down the title of most rigid assembly (and it slides almost as=20
>well as the new Bosch). The PC is the next best, the Dewalt I rate 3rd,=
=20
>and the Bosch is loosey-goosey--too much flex! That's a shame, because=20
>otherwise the Bosch looks well thought out, and it slides effortlessly.=20
> The Bosch , like the DeWalt has a drive belt.
>
>Dave
Have you or anyone else compared the new 12" Hitachi to the others? I =
saw one the other
day and it was huge, complete with the laser sight and a lcd numeric =
display on the hand
grip. (was in a hurry didn't get to see what the display was about....?) =
Has to be up the
with the biggest yet, although the makita has a novel drive system and is=
a great unit.
Seems like all the 12" SCMS have gone through some redesign since the =
Dewalt 12" hit the
street a couple of years ago...as the laser sights go however, the most =
useful one I have
seen from my perspective is the ones that are two beams that actually =
define the kerf of
the blade, otherwise just a simple laser lit line is not advantage from =
before using built
in graduations, or even pencil. Joe.
Joe Brophy
CountryTech Computer
email: [email protected]
Frank Drackman wrote:
> "David" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>
>>I finally got a chance to check out the 12" Makita slider alongside the
>>other contenders such as PC, Bosch, and DeWalt 718. The Makita wins hands
>>down the title of most rigid assembly (and it slides almost as well as the
>>new Bosch). The PC is the next best, the Dewalt I rate 3rd, and the Bosch
>>is loosey-goosey--too much flex! That's a shame, because otherwise the
>>Bosch looks well thought out, and it slides effortlessly. The Bosch , like
>>the DeWalt has a drive belt.
>>
>>Dave
>
>
> Do you have procedures and data that you could share? It is hard to get any
> real information from terms like loosey-goosey and how do you know that you
> were applying the same amount of force to each unit?
>
> Frank
>
>
the differences were so dramatic, I don't need a strain gauge to tell
the difference, Frank!
"loosey-goosey" is a highly technical term, anyway...
Dave
Jim wrote:
> "David" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>
>>I finally got a chance to check out the 12" Makita slider alongside the
>>other contenders such as PC, Bosch, and DeWalt 718. The Makita wins hands
>>down the title of most rigid assembly (and it slides almost as well as the
>>new Bosch). The PC is the next best, the Dewalt I rate 3rd, and the Bosch
>>is loosey-goosey--too much flex! That's a shame, because otherwise the
>>Bosch looks well thought out, and it slides effortlessly. The Bosch , like
>>the DeWalt has a drive belt.
>>
>>Dave
>
> The DW718 that I tried at Lowe's certainly did not feel loose.
> Jim
>
>
then you have perhaps no basis for comparison? I've tried several, now.
Dave
"David" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I finally got a chance to check out the 12" Makita slider alongside the
>other contenders such as PC, Bosch, and DeWalt 718. The Makita wins hands
>down the title of most rigid assembly (and it slides almost as well as the
>new Bosch). The PC is the next best, the Dewalt I rate 3rd, and the Bosch
>is loosey-goosey--too much flex! That's a shame, because otherwise the
>Bosch looks well thought out, and it slides effortlessly. The Bosch , like
>the DeWalt has a drive belt.
>
> Dave
Do you have procedures and data that you could share? It is hard to get any
real information from terms like loosey-goosey and how do you know that you
were applying the same amount of force to each unit?
Frank
[email protected] wrote:
> Dave,
>
> What I'm wondering is, where did you try them and who assembled them?
> If you're talking about some store that had all those saws on display,
> assembled by one or two minimum-wage people who had time to get the
> first three assembled and adjusted right but got told to get the lead
> out for the last one, which was a Bosch, I have to wonder if the test
> might be a little questionable. At the very least, if one of them felt
> all loosey goosey, I'd want to check and see if anything needed a
> little righty tighty.
>
nothing to do with assy. has ALL to do with the design.
Dave
Jim wrote:
> "David" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>
>>Jim wrote:
>>
>>
>>>"David" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>>>news:[email protected]...
>>>
>>>
>>>>I finally got a chance to check out the 12" Makita slider alongside the
>>>>other contenders such as PC, Bosch, and DeWalt 718. The Makita wins
>>>>hands down the title of most rigid assembly (and it slides almost as well
>>>>as the new Bosch). The PC is the next best, the Dewalt I rate 3rd, and
>>>>the Bosch is loosey-goosey--too much flex! That's a shame, because
>>>>otherwise the Bosch looks well thought out, and it slides effortlessly.
>>>>The Bosch , like the DeWalt has a drive belt.
>>>>
>>>>Dave
>>>
>>>The DW718 that I tried at Lowe's certainly did not feel loose.
>>>Jim
>>
>>then you have perhaps no basis for comparison? I've tried several, now.
>>
>>Dave
>
> Well, you have tried several assemblers whose only job is to get the thing
> on display. Of course, I have tried only one mainly because I am not in the
> market for a device this expensive.
> Jim
>
>
i wish it wasn't over $600 myself. :)
Dave
"David" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Jim wrote:
>
>> "David" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>> news:[email protected]...
>>
>>>I finally got a chance to check out the 12" Makita slider alongside the
>>>other contenders such as PC, Bosch, and DeWalt 718. The Makita wins
>>>hands down the title of most rigid assembly (and it slides almost as well
>>>as the new Bosch). The PC is the next best, the Dewalt I rate 3rd, and
>>>the Bosch is loosey-goosey--too much flex! That's a shame, because
>>>otherwise the Bosch looks well thought out, and it slides effortlessly.
>>>The Bosch , like the DeWalt has a drive belt.
>>>
>>>Dave
>>
>> The DW718 that I tried at Lowe's certainly did not feel loose.
>> Jim
> then you have perhaps no basis for comparison? I've tried several, now.
>
> Dave
Well, you have tried several assemblers whose only job is to get the thing
on display. Of course, I have tried only one mainly because I am not in the
market for a device this expensive.
Jim