Home Depot is currently having a sale on the Ryobi ONE+ HP 18V Brushless Cordless 10-inch Sliding Compound Miter Saw. The Kit comes with 4.0 Ah HIGH PERFORMANCE Battery and Charger, and you have the ability to add another 4.0 Ah HIGH-PERFORMANCE Battery as a free item.
So, that is two 4.0 Ah HIGH-PERFORMANCE Batteries and the Miter Saw for $299 plus tax. I was able to return the extra battery and get a refund of $119 today, making the total $180 plus tax for saw and 1 battery YMMV
https://www.homedepot.com/p/RYOBI.../319830428
For reference, Home Depot has the same Ryobi 10-inch sliding Miter Saw (tool only) for $350 without the 2 extra batteries. (
https://www.homedepot.com/p/RYOBI-ONE-HP-18V-Brushless-Cordless-10-in-Sliding-Compound-Miter-Saw-Tool-Only-PBLMS01B/319830427 [homedepot.com])
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Update: I was able to return 1 of the batteries and got a refund of $119. Making it only $180 plus tax
I appreciate your effort. This deal was covered in another thread for the 18v table saw.
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correction: the one I am using is 7 1/4
As someone with both a plug-in 10 inch sliding miter saw and a 7 1/4 inch battery-powered sliding miter saw (Ridgid), my favorite thing about the 7 1/4 inch saw is its portability. Because it slides it's able to make pretty much any cross cut I need AND it's small and light enough to move around a job site. Get much bigger though and miter saws become a pain in the ass to slep around.
Unless you have a specific need for especially large cross cuts if you want a portable miter saw, I'd suggest getting a 7 1/4 inch slider.
And if you don't need portability, then get a 10 or 12 inch plug-in saw.
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As someone with both a plug-in 10 inch sliding miter saw and a 7 1/4 inch battery-powered sliding miter saw (Ridgid), my favorite thing about the 7 1/4 inch saw is its portability. Because it slides it's able to make pretty much any cross cut I need AND it's small and light enough to move around a job site. Get much bigger though and miter saws become a pain in the ass to slep around.
Unless you have a specific need for especially large cross cuts if you want a portable miter saw, I'd suggest getting a 7 1/4 inch slider.
And if you don't need portability, then get a 10 or 12 inch plug-in saw.
1/4, apologies. However I wouldnt mind having 10" I believe both are equally portable.
Its in my garage however I use it around the yard or on the driveway, not in the garage 90% of time, a 4ah batter lasts forever on it and with the Ridgid stand its easy to drag around.
I did try a 10" Makita on a jobsite once and I was impressed but it's running 36 volts.
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