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Recommendations for a Good Chop Saw?

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Hey guys - I need a good chop saw that will cut up to 5" exhaust pipe. Right now I'm looking at a Dewalt DW871.



Any other good recommendations? I'm not so sure that I need a Dewalt, because a saw is only as good as its blade, so I was wondering if I could get away with something cheaper. It won't be used very much, but I want it to be there when I do need it, and it needs to be reliable.



What about Chicago Electric power tools from Harbor Freight? Should I stay away from these?



Thanks!
 
Check out Ridgids model, its only at Home Depot, but I have many Ridgid tools, and love everyone of them, cheaper than Dewalt, but not cheaply built by any means.
 
I believe you get what you pay for. A friend of mine has a few Chicago Electric tools. They do work, but lack the power of the name brands and probably will not last as long if used regularly. I have mostly Milwaukee and Porter Cable power tools and have been extremely happy with their power and quality. Rigid is coming out with a line of power tools with a lifetime warranty available online. Happy shopping.
 
5" requires a pretty big chop saw to get through in one pass. my makita with a brand new disc can make a clean pass through 4" pipe, but once worn, it needs to be rotated...



maybe a bandsaw might be better suited for this... ? makes very clean cuts through all steel & aluminum [angle, tube, box, bar stock. . ] just can't cut hardened materals. . or a power hacksaw [not so good for thin tube, but good for all else]



hmm. . just did a search on that dw871 to find out what the price is on it, and it doesn't seem to have great reviews
 
Have you considered a bandsaw?? I have one, and use it all the time fabricating, including my own exhaust work.
 
The ones I've been looking at will cut through round 5" pipe and some one that dewalt has will cut through 5 3/16" pipe. A lot of band saws won't go that big.
 
That Dewalt is a good saw. So is the Rigid, Makita nd Milwaukee. I bought some Chicago Elec tool drill a few years back and all of them were junk in 6 months
 
I'd go with the Ridgid or the Milwaukee for a 14" saw.



If course, a large freestanding bandsaw is the ultimate, but about $1000 more:(
 
How about a Milwaukee deep throat portable band saw. I have a portable band saw and use it all the time less heat and you can control the cut. I also have a Milwaukee chop saw. Works great but makes a lots of sparks, noise, and mess. I want to try a dry cut metal saw.



Cary :cool:
 
As long as you can roll the pipe you can cut alot bigger than the throat depth with the portable band saw. Personally that's what I would buy because of it's versatility, in fact it probably won't be long till I have one. I've got a Delta Chop saw but I'm not sure of the capacity because I haven't used it in a long time. It worked ok, and for exhaust pipe it'd probably do pretty good but I find them slow and messy for the heavier gauge materials.
 
I have a ryobi, cheaper brand, but it gets the job done. I haven't had any problems with it, just keep a new disc around for cutting pipe.
 
I have a 14" Milwaukee chop saw that is an incredible POS. It won't cut strait, the damn disk deflects as much as 1/8" from top to bottom of a 2" cut. It seems like the axis of the motor/disc is not parallel to the pivot point, which creates side pressure on the disc, causing it to deflect.



I have tried every brand of disk that I can get my hands on, vaired feed rates, and everything else I can think of... the saw just sucks. I don't recommend them (BTW, their angle grinders have gone down hill in the last 10 years too... . ).
 
BDeArmon said:
I have a 14" Milwaukee chop saw that is an incredible POS. It won't cut strait, the damn disk deflects as much as 1/8" from top to bottom of a 2" cut. It seems like the axis of the motor/disc is not parallel to the pivot point, which creates side pressure on the disc, causing it to deflect.



I have tried every brand of disk that I can get my hands on, vaired feed rates, and everything else I can think of... the saw just sucks. I don't recommend them (BTW, their angle grinders have gone down hill in the last 10 years too... . ).





:-laf I had 3 dewalt 14" chops that all burned up with about 30 min of total usage. That was 4 years ago, I then got a Milwaukee and it's been working great ever since. Oo.



Kevin
 
Hey guys - thanks for all the responses. This tool forum is working out well!



Anyway, I think I may try a Milwaukee. I'm looking at the 6180-20. It can be had for around $200. I also love the idea of the "dry-cut" machine but it's over twice the price and I probably wouldn't be using it enough to justify the $420 price tag.



The 6180-20 can handle up to 5-3/8" OD pipe.



Check 'em out below:



Milwaukee Chop Saws
 
I have had the Dewalt DW871 for about 2-3 years now. It's been great and never had any problems with it... except for when I forget to plug it in.
 
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