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Post Date | Sold By | Sale Price | Activity |
---|---|---|---|
04/02/24 | Home Depot | $200 |
6 |
02/27/24 | Home Depot | $219 |
15 |
01/31/24 | Home Depot | $219 |
49 |
01/23/24 | Home Depot | $144 |
13 |
11/01/23 | Home Depot | $187.03 popular |
36 |
10/08/23 | Home Depot | $150.69 popular |
33 |
09/29/23 | Home Depot | $229 popular |
61 |
05/11/23 | Home Depot | $200 popular |
29 |
12/27/22 | Home Depot | $249 popular |
14 |
12/23/22 | Home Depot | $249 popular |
6 |
12/08/22 | Home Depot | $249 frontpage |
85 |
11/08/22 | Home Depot | $269 |
9 |
10/24/22 | Home Depot | $269 popular |
123 |
09/24/22 | Home Depot | $180 popular |
24 |
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90 day return policy. Like the other suggested, you can return the new saw with the old receipt
on that previous deal, I paid 177 after tax. I ordered the stand at a different store than the saw. picked up the saw and immediately cancelled the stand. Got the refund back in 2 days.
Agreed. If I had a shop with it permanently setup up and outlets, I would definitely opt for a traditional plug in. Especially if you factor in that this saw really should be running off a higher ah battery and to have back ups could be costly vs just plugging in. Metabo makes a hybrid plug&and battery powered miter saw if someone wants the best of both worlds.
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on that previous deal, I paid 177 after tax. I ordered the stand at a different store than the saw. picked up the saw and immediately cancelled the stand. Got the refund back in 2 days.
This is supposed to cut a 4x6? No way.
I was told buying a higher capacity battery and a better blade would help, but that's bogus that it can't operate with what it's sent with? If I buy a bigger battery and a new blade now I'm adding enough cost where it approaches what I paid on the DeWalt 12" slider ($250)
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This is supposed to cut a 4x6? No way.
I was told buying a higher capacity battery and a better blade would help, but that's bogus that it can't operate with what it's sent with? If I buy a bigger battery and a new blade now I'm adding enough cost where it approaches what I paid on the DeWalt 12" slider ($250)
Where'd you get a Dewalt 10" cordless slider?
I knew they did a 7-1/4" and I think a 12", but it's nowhere near $150'ish.
This Ryobi saw isn't for everyone, that's for sure. But if you're already committed to the Ryobi system, an at-home DIY'er who's not using it every day like a contractor would, or just need something a little more portable from time to time, it's a good solution.
The saw + batteries is normally $399 (MSRP) and usually on sale for $300-350. To get both for $250 is a pretty sweet deal.
Now, my use case is trim boards, fencing, maybe the occasional 4x4 or 2x12, but again, I'm coming from a DIY standpoint. If I was a contractor or handyman, I'd never even give this a look.
I knew they did a 7-1/4" and I think a 12", but it's nowhere near $150'ish.
This Ryobi saw isn't for everyone, that's for sure. But if you're already committed to the Ryobi system, an at-home DIY'er who's not using it every day like a contractor would, or just need something a little more portable from time to time, it's a good solution.
The saw + batteries is normally $399 (MSRP) and usually on sale for $300-350. To get both for $250 is a pretty sweet deal.
Now, my use case is trim boards, fencing, maybe the occasional 4x4 or 2x12, but again, I'm coming from a DIY standpoint. If I was a contractor or handyman, I'd never even give this a look.
So, if this device can't perform at it's $145/165 price, then I think you should add the cost of a blade and a higher capacity battery to even consider this, and then suddenly it's not a very good deal.
So, if this device can't perform at it's $145/165 price, then I think you should add the cost of a blade and a higher capacity battery to even consider this, and then suddenly it's not a very good deal.
You must be referring to the 12" corded Dewalt + stand if you're referring to it being hackable. I'm pretty sure it's still available if that's a better fit for you. But the 12" Dewalt battery operated model is closer to $800, and downtimes $500-600 on sale with no stand.
If you're looking for a $150'ish corded saw, there are a ton of options. But to find a battery operated 10" (not a 7-1/4") with a battery / charger is much harder.
I sold my Dewalt DWS779 (12" corded miter saw) because it was 55 lbs and an unwieldy mf to use when I needed it. I kept the stand, so now all I need is a new saw - this is perfect for me, since I've already got a dozen 4AH batteries. Even if I need to buy a new blade for $30'ish, and to be sub-$200 all in on a 10" 18V saw is a slick deal, IMO.
But again, it's not everyone's use case. I'm not trying to plow through 2x12s all day, or build cabinets in my garage. I can afford to take an extra 10 seconds to cut through a board, 2-3x a year for $400'ish in cost savings (and not having to get into another battery tool system).
YMMV.
Definitely if portability was in the mix, the cordless variations are great though. The guy I sold the cordless miter saw to couldn't believe how light it was when he picked it up.