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WorkZone 210mm 1200W Table Saw $99.99 @ ALDI

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  • Dimensions: 625 x 575 x 435mm
  • Saw blade: Ø 210mm
  • Table size: 525 x 400mm
  • Cutting depth at 90°: 48mm
  • Cutting depth at 45°: 45mm
  • 0°-45° bevel and mitre gauge
  • 5 Year Warranty
  • 60 Day Satisfaction Guarantee

Related Stores

ALDI
ALDI

closed Comments

  • +3

    I dont need one but price is tempting

  • +1

    Seems like these get cheaper every year,

  • +8

    I've got one of these, quality isn't great but at $99, who's complaining. I've had a fair bit of use out of it and it's definitely paid itself off.

    Just be careful that you loosen the locking for the bevel adjustment, I've lost a couple of teeth off of the cog that drives it.

    Pro tip: mine was $50. Wait until they're reduced!

    • Can it cut any width timber?

      • +4

        Not at $99 but it will for $50

        • After looking at reviews I've decided to just get a clamp guide to use with my circular saw. For the amount of times I need it, this is a cheaper option

  • Do you know how many Watts it is?

    • +4

      WorkZone 210mm 1200W Table Saw $99.99 @ ALDI

      😉

      • +1

        Ahh, it's in the title! 🤦‍♂️

        • Haha don’t worry, when I saw you had asked I went and looked in the details of it but then noticed it in the title. Could easily be mistaken for ‘width’ at first glance.

  • this or mitre saw better for DIY furniture and decking project?

    • +1

      mitre saw

    • +2

      Not an expert on making furniture or decking. But generally mitre saw are for dealing with timbers usually not that wide however with a rather long length, which could be timbers for decking.

      It really depends on what sort of furniture you are going to make…

      • small bench and leg

        • +3

          If you really have to just buy one out of the two then a "sliding mitre saw" will better suit your requirements than a normal one as it can provide longer cut length.

    • +2

      Definitely a mitre saw for deck.
      For furniture, depends on design, could be useful if you build a cross cut sled.
      Table Saws no good for decking as you can only safely cross cut if you build a sled first and then max length is probably around a metre. Can use the mitre gauge for some one-off cross cuts at a pinch, but not very accurate.

      • +1 for making a cross cut sled. Check out the 5 cut method and get more accurate using this then a mitre saw.

        • Except you're never going to get accurate cuts off an Aldi table saw. Even if you got the fence true to the blade, it would flex that much you'd be out of 90 degrees again anyway.

    • I have both, 100000% the mitre saw.

      This would only be useful for trimming down pieces to a specific width.

  • +4

    Anything links to the rest of the catalogue, or are we going to be drip-fed deals every day?

  • Everybody gunna go cray cray over that $69 pop up coffee table i reckon.

  • Agree wait till its on clearance
    think i got it for about $50. I have this and we used it for our deck and also for a floating floor.. we also had to split some boards inc fascia lengthways.. as long as you measure and get your self setup, we successfully cut 3m mod/future wood type product as well as some floating floor boards lengthways… for a finer, less of a rip cut i would recommend changing the blade.. we also used a slide compound mitre saw and stand, both had their uses.

  • How's the guide - does it slide nicely and stay parallel, or is it clunky and need setting both ends every time?

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