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And looking for hard to find table saw inserts. I use a ridgid 4512 table saw and the onle zero, and dado throat plate I found were through a company called lee craft. Very good product and fits the ridgid saw well. While I did not see the harbor freight saw in the list, most of that central Machine stuff is out of the same factory as a name brand.
Harbor Freight - 16" Scroll Saw Part #93012 (Rating: 4) It was suggested that I review this product so I figure what the heck, the least I can do is try to add to the community. I have had the saw for about 2 weeks now. Overall, I think it is a great saw. I have cut plywood and pine with it. I haven't had the chance to run any hardwood through ...
I purchased a Harbor Freight saw on ebay and had it shipped here through global shipping which ended up being FedEx. Ebay has a service that allows you to pay the custom charges and global shipping charges through them. The total cost of a $119 saw ended up being $205. A person must really need a table saw to pay that much for a Harbor Freight ...
Called right as they opened. They said there was one Virginia. Guess they only need one for the sale.. Same thing on bessey clamps. I was prepared to buy $2000 worth the day of the sale.. called everyday till the Day of the sale. All had been spoken for before the sale.There wasn't very many as the sales guide jndicated..
Much heavier, robust, and powerful. Today they have 3 miter saws. The old standby General Machinery 12", currently on sale for 189 bux, the in between Admiral, a much better tool is 199. The Hercules which really does look to be a well made tool is 349, all are much less on sale. This guy who owns them is a pretty smart guy.
I have three dust collectors. Two three horse "four bag" systems and a Harbor Freight. I bought the HF because the other two are too big to haul out to my yard to pull through a Super Dust Deputy to do pine cone and leaf clean up. The first thing I replaced was the dust pump. I replaced with with a 1 micron bag. It did okay, but I wanted more.
For years, the user manuals for most of the larger Delta saws, particularly the Unisaw, advertised their version of a moulding head cutter (Cat #24-813) and lots of various shaped knives. I have one of those and while it takes some getting used to, does work as advertised - although in many cases, a router table is a better method to accomplish ...
I can't help you with finding a source but that fence made my little Craftsman saw work like a new one. My saw had a table that was only 20 inches deep instead of the more normal 27 inch tables, so it kinda dwarfed it. I would have bought the Pro 26 but it was considerably higher so I went with the 40 instead.
A friend picked it up in Billings MT at the HF outlet. The list price was $189.99, on sale for $149.99 and after the 20% off coupon it ended up costing $119.99. The table height runs from 9" to 27¼" off the ground. The table size is 27¾" long and 17 5/8" wide. The paint job is good, thick, with no chips and was made in China.
Saving a few dollars here and there, I scrounged enough money together to buy a 3hp compressor motor (I know, don't buy compressor motors for table saws etc etc.), from harbor freight for $120 after a 25% coupon. There will be a dust shield for the motor either way, and I am trying to keep things under budget.