J

John <>

11/06/2004 6:36 PM

Playset plans and mitre saws

I just purchased a home and my kids have requested a backyard playset.
I think I'm up to the task, plus it gives me a good reason to buy a
compound mitre saw! I'm hoping for advice/recommendations on three
issues.

First, I live in the midwest (humid, hot summers and cold winters), so
I'm wondering whether I'm safe using pressure-treated pine or should
spend extra for cedar?

Second, can you recommend alternate sites for playset plans besides
the standard ones sold by Lowes/Home Depot?

Third, can group members please recommend their favorite compound
mitre saw for a newbie on a budget of $300 or less? Also, will a 10"
mitre saw be enough to cut 4x4's and 4x6's, or do I need a 12" model?


Cheers,

John


This topic has 3 replies

Bb

"Brikp"

in reply to John <> on 11/06/2004 6:36 PM

14/06/2004 11:18 AM

John,
Check out http://playstarinc.com/chb-front.asp I built this in a Saturday. A
10" saw will be fine. This kit has the plans and materials cut lists plus
all the hardware except deck screws.

Let me recomend this. If you are going to invest in a tool get skip the CMS
(if you have a circular saw). and get a good elec. driver.

I have my eye on this

http://www.hitachi.us/Apps/hitachicom/CordlessTools/144volt/144voltdetails/WH14DMB%20-%2014.4V%201_4%20in.%20Impact%20Driver.html&level=2&section=CordlessTools&parent=144volt&nav=left&path=jsp/hitachi/forhome/PowerTools/&nId=iD

When I built mine I used a corded milwalke.

Or get both!

I would use square drive screws too.

I am moving and plan on building from a kit from this company again once I
am in my new place.

Probably building http://playstarinc.com/super-star.asp

Have fun

-B


<John> wrote in message news:[email protected]...
> I just purchased a home and my kids have requested a backyard playset.
> I think I'm up to the task, plus it gives me a good reason to buy a
> compound mitre saw! I'm hoping for advice/recommendations on three
> issues.
>
> First, I live in the midwest (humid, hot summers and cold winters), so
> I'm wondering whether I'm safe using pressure-treated pine or should
> spend extra for cedar?
>
> Second, can you recommend alternate sites for playset plans besides
> the standard ones sold by Lowes/Home Depot?
>
> Third, can group members please recommend their favorite compound
> mitre saw for a newbie on a budget of $300 or less? Also, will a 10"
> mitre saw be enough to cut 4x4's and 4x6's, or do I need a 12" model?
>
>
> Cheers,
>
> John

JJ

"John"

in reply to John <> on 11/06/2004 6:36 PM

12/06/2004 2:12 AM

Building a playset is carpentry, not woodworking. (I am not saying anything
bad about carpentry, it just isn't woodworking!)

Any miter saw will work fine for you. The cheaper ones are not as precise
and maybe won't last 20 years of 24/7 use, but do you care about that?

A 10" won't do a 4x6 on a single cut, so you turn it over and finish. How
many thousand do you expect to cut? The 12" are much heavier and somewhat
more expensive; you probably want a 10".

TK

Thomas Kendrick

in reply to John <> on 11/06/2004 6:36 PM

15/06/2004 7:06 AM

Impact drivers are GREAT!
I tried the 12V Hitachi with the 2.0 AH batteries and was satisfied
with everything except the battery runtime. Returned it to the local
borg and ordered the Makita 14.4V with 2.6 AH batteries from Coastal
Tool and have been very satisfied with the runtime. A bit more money,
but I only need one for this lifetime.
Tom

On Mon, 14 Jun 2004 11:18:48 -0400, "Brikp" <[email protected]>
wrote:

>John,
>Check out http://playstarinc.com/chb-front.asp I built this in a Saturday. A
>10" saw will be fine. This kit has the plans and materials cut lists plus
>all the hardware except deck screws.
>
>Let me recomend this. If you are going to invest in a tool get skip the CMS
>(if you have a circular saw). and get a good elec. driver.
>
>I have my eye on this
>
>http://www.hitachi.us/Apps/hitachicom/CordlessTools/144volt/144voltdetails/WH14DMB%20-%2014.4V%201_4%20in.%20Impact%20Driver.html&level=2&section=CordlessTools&parent=144volt&nav=left&path=jsp/hitachi/forhome/PowerTools/&nId=iD
>
>When I built mine I used a corded milwalke.
>
>Or get both!
>
>I would use square drive screws too.
>
>I am moving and plan on building from a kit from this company again once I
>am in my new place.
>
>Probably building http://playstarinc.com/super-star.asp
>
>Have fun
>
>-B
>
>
><John> wrote in message news:[email protected]...
>> I just purchased a home and my kids have requested a backyard playset.
>> I think I'm up to the task, plus it gives me a good reason to buy a
>> compound mitre saw! I'm hoping for advice/recommendations on three
>> issues.
>>
>> First, I live in the midwest (humid, hot summers and cold winters), so
>> I'm wondering whether I'm safe using pressure-treated pine or should
>> spend extra for cedar?
>>
>> Second, can you recommend alternate sites for playset plans besides
>> the standard ones sold by Lowes/Home Depot?
>>
>> Third, can group members please recommend their favorite compound
>> mitre saw for a newbie on a budget of $300 or less? Also, will a 10"
>> mitre saw be enough to cut 4x4's and 4x6's, or do I need a 12" model?
>>
>>
>> Cheers,
>>
>> John
>


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