View Poll Results: Are you satisfied?
- Voters
- 46. You may not vote on this poll
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I own a TSC-10HB and I'm happy
7 15.22% -
I own a TSC-10HB and I'm sad
0 0% -
I own a Triton WC and I'm happy
8 17.39% -
I own a Triton WC and I'm sad
6 13.04% -
I sold my Triton and bought a TSC-10HB and I'm happy
8 17.39% -
I sold my Triton and bought a TSC-10HB and I'm sad
0 0% -
I sold my Triton and bought a TSC-10HB and I'm sad
0 0% -
This poll is not applicable to me and I'm sad
17 36.96%
Thread: Table Saw Satisfaction Survey
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14th May 2005, 07:55 PM #16Originally Posted by Groggy
I said I own the 10HB and happy coz my saw is just a 10HB on 'roids. It was the closest thing to the truth and that's good enough for me.
DanIs there anything easier done than said?- Stacky. The bottom pub, Cobram.
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14th May 2005, 08:22 PM #17Deceased
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I can't find the option " I've kept my Triton and bought a TSC-10HB and Im happy so I voted under the " Sold my Triton etc....."
I've kept my MK3 as the parts are worth more than the resale value of the unit so I'm stripping it for parts. The cost of the switch units and D handles alone makes it worthwile to strip it.
Peter.
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14th May 2005, 09:49 PM #18Originally Posted by E. maculata
Mass, 3hp vs 2, cooler blade, mass, can cut deeper (admittedly, rarely used), it weilds a mean dado blade, m a s s, very strong trunions - massive in fact, bigger table, it doesn't bog down in any cut (yet, anyway), did I say mass?
Finally, the last tool I wanted to undershoot on - performance wise - was the TS. I've made mistakes with being a cheap b*stard on the little stuff and knew I wouldn't forgive myself if I blew it on a machine I regretted. Please note this is not a negative comment on the TSC10 HB or its equivalent, just my personal view.
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14th May 2005, 09:56 PM #19Registered
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Originally Posted by Groggy
No not yet, off you go.....................Hail Marry mother of grace.
Al :eek:
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14th May 2005, 09:59 PM #20Originally Posted by ozwinner
Your turn if you're a massocist!
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14th May 2005, 10:06 PM #21Registered
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No thanks, I went through that cr*p as a kid.:mad:
I was beaten religiously at school....................pun intended.
Ive since seen the light, or is that the darkness.
Al
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14th May 2005, 10:38 PM #22
Groggy, nothins wrong with the 250mm jobbies, just razin some of you fellas'
however personally I never considered a 10" as an option for my needs, if thats what I needed I would have stayed with the MkIII, I needed the depth for resawing some red mahogany and grey gum 4x4s' I had in stock, just 2 of the really soft nothern nsw/SE QLD hardwood groups, also the choice of blades is much greater in 305mm (part of my job is fettling these sorta things cept in an industrial configuration) . Then again I'm spoilt as this is just a weekend shed saw, in a former occupation the saws I operated were twin 72" with 400hp motors capable of cutting logs of up to 8' x near 60' in a single billet.Bruce C.
catchy catchphrase needed here, apply in writing to the above .
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14th May 2005, 11:16 PM #23Originally Posted by E. maculata
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14th May 2005, 11:20 PM #24Originally Posted by E. maculata
You are possibly the only member that actually uses your saw to it's true capacity.
Few of us have access to 4" thick boards I think.
Hell, the 10HB will cut 3" but it's pretty unlikley that I'll ever have acess to a 3" board.
(I'll probably find now that the rest of you twelve inchers cut four inch boards every day }
Oh well, flame away
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14th May 2005, 11:36 PM #25Deceased
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Originally Posted by Groggy
Groggy, the TSC10hb has a 3 hp motor not a 2hp one.
What mean dado blade do you have as mine is 8 " which I thought was the biggest. Doesn't an 8 " blade used in the 10 " or 12" still only cuts to the same depth. :confused:
Peter.
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14th May 2005, 11:38 PM #26Originally Posted by craigb
I haven't used all the speeds available on my drill press, I rarely use the full 8" cut on my jointer, have only put 12" boards through my thicknesser a few times, I don't use all the power points in the garage at once and only sometimes get the full benefit of my compressor.
I also drive at 100kms in a ute that will do 140 and am known to put only two slices of toast in a four slice toaster.
My one saving grace is that I am not one of those people that drives a four wheel drive that never leaves the suburbs.
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14th May 2005, 11:45 PM #27Deceased
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Originally Posted by Groggy
Peter.
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14th May 2005, 11:55 PM #28Originally Posted by Sturdee
The reference to the dado blade was meant to indicate that you can hog out a huge amount of material without it slowing down at all. (My dado blade is an 8" also, and you are right, bigger dado blades would be a waste for 99.9% of work)
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14th May 2005, 11:56 PM #29Originally Posted by Groggy
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15th May 2005, 09:47 AM #30Originally Posted by Groggy
Craig, Some of the best timber (species wise) was cut into 4x4 for fences, and many of these fences are now being replaced as the posts rot off at the groundline, probably shoulda put that in the thread from last week on timber acquisition, but I reckon I'm not qualified to give advice on that issue, timber comes too easy to meBruce C.
catchy catchphrase needed here, apply in writing to the above .
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