DEWALT DW712 8-1/2-Inch, Nice saw for..
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Nice saw for cabinet/furniture makers
I’ve had this for about 6 months and it’s never let me down. It takes a little getting used to if you’ve never used a sliding miter saw before, as the technique is somewhere between a radial arm saw and a normal fixed miter saw. As a couple of other reviewers pointed out, you have to make sure you slide the saw all the way home or you’ll leave a little bit uncut. One thing I’ve found is when I’m cutting narrow planks (4″ or 6″) I’ve gotten into the habit of pulling the blade toward me past the front edge of the piece, dropping it down, and then sliding it back through the piece - instead of just plunging the blade straight in, as you’d do with a fixed chop saw. This seems to significantly reduce bottom tearout.It’s undeniably a very pleasant tool to use; if you’ve only used saws that have a vertical handle you won’t believe the difference the horizontal handle makes. The switch is well designed, it’s not easy to trigger by accident but not fatiguing to hold. The action of the slides is smooth as silk, and setting the miter angles is quick, easy, and very positive. The motor has plenty of power for any kind of wood I’ve ever sent its way. The 8 1/2 inch size has some advantages - the blade seems to be more stable, even without a stabilizer, than most 10″ blades. Also in my experience 8 1/2″ blades are a little cheaper than the equivalent 10″ blade. But, it won’t cut a 4×4 (or a 2×4 on edge) in one pass - a 10 incher will. Whether or not that matters depends on the kind of work you do.You’ll want to replace the blade that the saw comes with, it’s fine for chopping up 2×4s (but if that’s all you want to do you don’t need this saw) but not good enough for finish work. There aren’t a million blades available for this size of saw, but there’s a decent selection - although not all the catalogs carry them. My favorite is a 60 tooth DeWalt finish blade that you can find most anywhere for about 50 bucks and does great work for me in all types of hardwood. Freud makes one that’s pretty good as well. Forrest makes one of their chopmaster blades in this size, I’m sure it’s great but it’s $100+ and since I’m happy with my current blade I’ve never tried it.Overall fit and finish is very nice - as you generally expect from contemporary Italian manufacture. After taking it out of the box, I went over it completely with my machinist square and couldn’t find anything out of alignment. The only quality complaint I have is the crummy screws holding the blade guard on - blade changing is not exactly a snap with this saw and they really don’t help.There’s no clamp included, unlike some other manufacturers - since I prefer to keep all 10 of my fingers I bought one - but they soak you on this item - $35!! Actually I bought two but you only need one - you hardly ever use both at once and it takes a second or two to swap it from one side of the saw to the other. Also, while it holds well, it’s a screw type and I would prefer some type of cam action - I think that would be faster and easier to use.But overall if you want a really sweet, pleasant to use saw and you don’t normally need to cut large timber, I’d recommend this saw - I’m certainly very happy with it.
Update (2/7/2012): This item is currently on sale here for the lowest price I’ve seen.
The featured review for this product, DEWALT DW712 8-1/2-Inch Single-Bevel Sliding Compound Miter Saw Tools & Hardware, was written by E. A. Jamieson.
The average rating for this item is out of 5 stars, according to 3 reviews.
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Reviews (3)
E. A. Jamieson
January 18th, 2010 at 4:58 pm
Nice saw for cabinet/furniture makers
Rated 4 stars.
Jonathan Conway
January 24th, 2010 at 11:31 am
Good but not great
Let me first say that I still do not see miter saw that I would rate five stars (although I think I rated the 12 "Dewalt slide 5 stars), because manufacturers do not comply with any profits above product. But I like it looked very good. Slide is smooth, fence height good (if Makita and Hitachi are finally getting the fence height to the right and even on both sides), miter lock lever is awesome (knobs smell), blade deflection is good (it is only one 8-1/2 blade afterall), overall a really good saw. Dust collection systems complaints are not relevant when one expects a slider miter saw good dust control lives in the world of clean radial arm saws have. I still have to find out what a "material hold down clamp "(or work clamp), but if I have to do more, it means that I should not cut off on my arms / hands and looked through the use of these anyway (we professionals do not have time for a tougher approach against wood should be before cutting it [short pieces from a long, afterall] can be cut). I would buy another in an instant.
Keith Smith
February 13th, 2010 at 7:44 am
Not perfect but
I have just bought the DeWalt712 to replace an aging Makita LS1040 I have had for four years. I was really impressed with the facilities and price and I have been very happy with all the DeWalt tools I have purchased, so it was an obvious choice.The saw cuts wood! the extended ranges of cutting angles is great and the machine feels realy good to use, soft start, and it has good ergonomics; (on the 240v version only two buttons to press, make it easy for someone with small hands: but on the battery powered version 3 buttons are not so easy).However I have a couple of complaints with the machine;Firstly the guard runs along the workpiece on a wheel and I find that it feels like the wood is cut through when there is still a small corner left to cut and it can snag the workpiece when cutting some mitres. This could be operator error and I will probably get used to it in time.Secondly the dust extraction is very poor. I have a workshop with a built in dust extraction system, with a 2Kw industrial vacuum unit I am used to a reasonably dust free workshop but this machine fires dust everywhere. I have to wear a dust mask when I use it, as the dust hits the piece of fabric behind the blade and bounces into my face.I really like this machine and if you work on site I could recommend it to you; but unless I find a solution to the dust problem I am going to take advantage of the 30 day return policy and take it back, although I will be very sorry to part with it.Well, I took it back and swapped it for a DW706, which I really did not like. Very fierce start and big blade did not suit me at all (I know I would have been better with the variable speed version).So I returned it next day and got my DW712 back!The dealer tells me there is a dust extraction kit, despite the fact DeWalt told me that no kit is available, so I have ordered it and hope it is effective.
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