rbattelle
TDR MEMBER
Here's another "this vs. that" question. Mechanically, I know the difference between a worm drive circular saw and a direct drive circular saw. It's apparent to me that a worm drive, because of it's gear arrangement, should develop significantly more torque and lower RPM at the blade than a direct drive saw.
But I'm not clear on specifically which is the more advantageous. Does it depend on what you're cutting? Is there anything you can't do with a worm drive that you can do with a direct drive? If I were only going to ever purchase 1 single circular saw to do everything from building decks to workbenches, is there any reason that circular saw should not be a worm drive?
I've never seen a worm drive in use (never known anyone that had one), so direct drive must be vastly more common. Why?
-Ryan
But I'm not clear on specifically which is the more advantageous. Does it depend on what you're cutting? Is there anything you can't do with a worm drive that you can do with a direct drive? If I were only going to ever purchase 1 single circular saw to do everything from building decks to workbenches, is there any reason that circular saw should not be a worm drive?
I've never seen a worm drive in use (never known anyone that had one), so direct drive must be vastly more common. Why?
-Ryan