About to be in the market for a new circular saw, just looking for the typical 7.25 blade saw. One thing that has constantly bothered me though is the depth adjustment. Every saw I’ve ever had used a flip lever on a nut in the back, and that’s always been the point of failure. They slip, break, seize or otherwise fail first before anything else on the saw. And it’s literally the only setting on a saw that i ever touch beyond changing blades.

So what brand has a reliable depth adjustment?

  • @Death_Equity@lemmy.world
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    26 months ago

    Skill, Bosch, and Metabo are S tier corded saws. They all have the standard lever adjusted screw for depth adjustment, but they are professional tools and have better longevity. Going worm drive is even more reliable and stronger because that is a framer’s tool, so it is designed for use and abuse.

    • @Skyrmir@lemmy.worldOP
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      16 months ago

      Thanks, I think I’ve narrowed it down to either the Makita 5377MG or Bosch CSW41. Not happy with that depth selector, but probably as good as I’m going to get. At least it’s outside the housing where I can see and/or modify it. I’m leaning towards the Makita, but i don’t see a trigger lock, and I’m going to want that for some future OSHA violations without having to resort to zip ties.

      • @Death_Equity@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        While I do love resisting the fascist OSHA totalitarian Nazis, a trigger lock on a saw is how you feed the hungry saw your dick ticklers.

        • @Skyrmir@lemmy.worldOP
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          16 months ago

          Yeah, but if I’m going to live without a table saw, I’m going to want to do some creative fixturing once in a while. Fortunately for what I have in mind, fingers will be kept clear. Bigger issue will be avoiding kick back and flying off cuts. I inserted some oak into a cement board wall the last time. I’ve upgraded to a concrete wall now, so much less of a problem.

          • @BlackVenom@lemmy.world
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            116 days ago

            Hope you’re not talking about using a circular saw upside down as if it were a table saw. I’d do some stupid stuff but that I wouldn’t. If you live in the US or CA you can get a used table saw under 100 if you watch… Even the worst saw on the market is better and safer than using a circular saw like that.

            • @Skyrmir@lemmy.worldOP
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              116 days ago

              Oh I can easily afford a table saw, I just don’t have the space for one. Especially for a tool that I’ll only rarely use. I ended up going with a Makita framing saw. It’s maybe heavier than I needed, but it’s easy to mount into a jig if I need to. So far I haven’t needed any accurate rips I couldn’t do freehand anyway, but the option is there if it comes up.