The Miter Saw allows the craftsperson to saw very accurate angles. The Miter Saw is a hardened steel razor saw that travels within a precision guide allowing the craftsman to make accurate cuts in wood, plastic and metal. The adjustable fence swings through an arc of precise degree marks with a positive stop at 90 . This allows the modeler to make accurate repeatable cuts for tight fits on mitered corners. The Miter Saw is an excellent tool for many hobby requirements including Model Airplane and Ship parts Model Railroad and Train Layouts Miniatures - Furniture and Picture Frames The Miter Saw is made in the United States from alder wood and glass filled nylon.
J**.
Great Miter Saw for Science Olympiad Building Events
This works really well for what we needed it for. The only reason I didn't give it all five stars is because it would be great if the degrees sticker was all the way from 0 to 180. We are using this small miter saw to cut balsa wood pieces for our building events for Science Olympiad. Otherwise, we love how easy it is to use. It made our build time less as well as our frustration levels.
W**N
Excellent Product
Excellent product that makes perfectly square cuts in dimensional lumber that I use in scratch building model railroad structures and rolling stock. This item was shipped in a timely manner and was very well wrapped.
A**N
Probably perfect for wood
Not quite right for my purpose, which was to cut some thin 28ga. metal. Probably perfect for wood, so no complaints. Just not for me.
R**D
Worthwhile Tool
Great. No problems. Does its job.
J**R
Five Stars
good and very useful product. well manufactured. got on time
D**N
A very unique designed and useful product. I love it!
A very uniquely designed and useful product. I love it! I would highly recommend this tool for any modeler that scratch builds.
D**3
Helpful, but needs enhancements.
Read some blogs about this. Using this with the miter sander is the way to go. There is still too much "play" in the blade. After a month and a half, I have a 1/4" "tail" cut into the supporting block opposite the blade channel. Why not a longer channel for the blade to avoid wiggle? Also, there is not an easy way to do repeat cuts.
Trustpilot
1 day ago
2 weeks ago