dårlig jeger
Lil-Rokslider
- Joined
- Nov 23, 2025
- Messages
- 297
Scopes are tools, nothing more.
As a carpenter, I use a skill saw a bunch. I need it to adjust to different depths and bevels for a wide range of cuts. It also needs to maintain a 90* blade angle for the vast majority of my cuts. The locking mechanism that holds the guide in place needs to be solid, durable, and accurate.
Let's say I can take different brand skill saws and roll them down a flight of wooden stairs. My Milwaukee saws can take this tumble and not flinch. No loss of guide angle, no slipping of depth. It locks solid. On the other hand, my tool shop saws always come loose or the angle slips. The locking mechanism is not as solid.
I don't need an exact stair height, number of steps, controlled tumble. The test, rudimentary as it is, reveals weakness in some designs and proves strength in others. I don't need anything more than that. It can be that simple. It's just people that want to make it complicated because they don't understand it.
And for those that like to say, "I don't drop my saws down stairs", you're missing the point. The stairs just show which saws are made with a durable, accurate locking mechanism that will last a long time and not cause issues. The stairs also show which brands or models don't have tough and dependable locking mechanisms which will slip on you, cause issues, or not last as long.
If you're someone who uses their saw twice a year and checks it before each use, toolshop is probably fine. If you want durable and a long life of hard use with no issues, milwaukee might be your jam.
As a carpenter, I use a skill saw a bunch. I need it to adjust to different depths and bevels for a wide range of cuts. It also needs to maintain a 90* blade angle for the vast majority of my cuts. The locking mechanism that holds the guide in place needs to be solid, durable, and accurate.
Let's say I can take different brand skill saws and roll them down a flight of wooden stairs. My Milwaukee saws can take this tumble and not flinch. No loss of guide angle, no slipping of depth. It locks solid. On the other hand, my tool shop saws always come loose or the angle slips. The locking mechanism is not as solid.
I don't need an exact stair height, number of steps, controlled tumble. The test, rudimentary as it is, reveals weakness in some designs and proves strength in others. I don't need anything more than that. It can be that simple. It's just people that want to make it complicated because they don't understand it.
And for those that like to say, "I don't drop my saws down stairs", you're missing the point. The stairs just show which saws are made with a durable, accurate locking mechanism that will last a long time and not cause issues. The stairs also show which brands or models don't have tough and dependable locking mechanisms which will slip on you, cause issues, or not last as long.
If you're someone who uses their saw twice a year and checks it before each use, toolshop is probably fine. If you want durable and a long life of hard use with no issues, milwaukee might be your jam.