For anyone doubting the build quality of these. We've had one in the shop for the past 2,5 years and it hasn't skipped a beat. It hasn't seen daily use, but it has had it's fair share of abuse, including a few timber framed buildings.
@@10MinuteWorkshop No, they're not perfect, but it pays for itself on the first job. Hard to argue with that. We fully expected it to fail at some point, especially after a few full days of full depth trenching cuts in fir, but it just goes if the blade is sharp.
I have the older model without the knive, out of the box it needed some tuning, blade not square to base and not 90 or 45 degree, minor adjustments and it is ok, the biggest problem is the wobble , if you loose the pivot point and fit on both sides shims, in my case 0.15 mm and the wobble was almost gone, with a good blade and a brand bearing it performs just like a Makita for example. And if you realy love your Parkside or other entry level saw you must add a softstart module for sure.
I had to grab a blade on the fly for my ts55, could only get a 2.2mm as it was right at the end of the day and finishing the job off. I actually took my riving knife off so I could use the blade on my saw. Wasn’t until seeing this vid that I’ve just remembered I have never refitted it. That was about a year ago !
Great review. You know what I did? I trimmed it, so it fits a Makita guide rail. I used my table saw on the plunge saw and trimmed just a kerf-size off. I used a general purpose cmt blade, so it was 3.2 mm. Quite a lot. Almost to the button. But it doesn't matter, since it runs perfectly. It's not my idea, I saw it in a youtube video.
I have a Parkside saw, it has been in use for 4 years, I use the evolution rail, use it complete my self build house, no issues. Used for hundreds of hours. I did change the bade tooth size immediately for hard woods.
Another useful video. One other benefit to a riving knife is found when you cut narrow strips, and want to keep the offcut, as in cutting for a woodstrip canoe. Without a riving knife, the strips wobble into the back of the blade, leaving a rough surface. A riving knife leaves them clean and smooth.
I have had the lidl one for a couple of years now. It is a very useful tool for breaking down sheet goods. I just used it today as a matter of fact to make panels to line the walls of my daughter's Wendy House.
I bought mine today after a long wait. As a power tool user of 60 years I cannot fault it. And why this pre occupation with whose tracks it will fit. The tracks supplied are readily available and excellent. The most important matter is the correct setting up procedures on saw benches, Bandsaw and planers and I suggest watching Craig Steel on Bandsaw at Axminster Power Tools as an example. Amazingly I have one niggle. The instructions have omitted the instructions do not mention the correct procedures for aligning the cam type followers on the machine which follow the track. They also do not mention the Allen screws which secure them, nor do they provide an Allen key to fit them. If these are correctly aligned the blade will run exactly parallel with the edge of the track and improve the finish of the cut and possibly even reduce the chance of kickback. With regard to the blade I never use blades with less than 48 teeth on saw benches or mitre saws but it is essential if you change the blade to remain with the same thickness blade and the last blades I bought came from Parkside and they are excellent. I bought 6 at 4 pounds each. They are as good as blades which cost me 50 pounds.
Good video Peter. ‘Next week Peter makes a simple but very large display cabinet for the biggest Tracksaw collection in the WORLD’ (said in Clarkson style)
@@10MinuteWorkshop Hahaha well played. "Peter bought another track saw, then THIS happened" :D Also, not in the world had I expected Lidl to put a riving knife to their saw. My 4x the price Makita does not have one. Then again, it has downsides and I don't need it, so... optional would propably be ideal, but isn't optional always ideal.
@10MinuteWorkshop can you confirm the size of the hex bolt that holds the blade, and that it's a normal threaded bolt? Mine's completely stripped so I have to drill it out and need to buy a replacement.
I’ve just bought one of these on Saturday, I was all set to buy the Mac Allister saw after watching your previous video, that was until Lidl opened a new store on the 29th of July just over 2 miles away… a Leaflet dropped through the door as I was about to leave for screwfix (31st of July) it had a bunch of “grand opening deals” one of which was for one day only.. the plunge saw was £34.99 😯 I’ve never moved so fast.. as I’ve never used a plunge saw before but find I need one for a project, this will be ideal to learn with. I’ll be watching your other videos shortly
I have a 2 lidl saws (sorry 3) and they all do what it says on the tin. I am not a proessional user only as a diy capacity but i have no complaints at all.
As it seems difficult to get tracks from the manufacturer direct at the moment (apparently they were available very reasonably priced, even including shipping from Germany but have been unavailable for a good while now), I thought I'd say that the Draper tracks (available on Amazon) seem to be identical to the Parkside ones, and I'm pretty sure the Lumber Jack and Excel (difficult to source atm as well) are as well.
Thanks, yes - the additional rails for all the Einhell-pattern saws - Parkside, Lumberjack, Excel, Rutlands etc… - have always been a bit of a challenge, especially as you can’t use the more common Makita-pattern rails. Wasn’t aware of the Draoer rails, thanks. The new Evolution G2 rails - video out later today - are the better option though. 👍
I like my Makita simply because I can reverse the blade arbor bushing, and use a cheaper, more widely available 5/8" bore thin kerf blade, as opposed to a metric blade.
I must admit, when I was in Lidl today and saw it did indeed have a riving knife I picked one up to replace my older one. Even if it doesnt do much at least I'm getting a fresh 3 year warranty!
re: Evolution ST1400 guide rail. I ordered a set of these on 28th May and have been informed by Amazon that they are arriving tomorrow 7th June. Tracking shows them originating in Italy.
I got sent replacement evo rails that arrived end of May but they did take 2 months to come. I damaged the rail slightly because the 2 rails were never cut square on the join and I forced the saw through join which wasn’t square it jumped out and damaged the rail. I sent evo some photos and they sent the new 1400 rails to me. Good company to deal with to be fair. Did you have any issue with unsquare joints on the rails?
@@whenshovelswereshovels3068 I had the same. Ends not cut square on the 1400 rails. A small error makes a big difference over 2800mm! Couldn’t wait for a replacement - wondered about using the mitre saw to square them up but settled for a file and patience!
@@mikerussell6469 ye mate exact trouble I had and I was cutting full sheet of wet wall at the time! I then put my 2 metre level along the side of the joined rails and realised how off the square they were. I do now have 2 sets of rails which is great but will have to file all of them square like you said.
Thanks to the excellent reviews and guides on this channel I've finally taken the plunge ( ha! ) and bought a Lidl Parkside track saw. I paid £79.99 but the cheap Mac Allister equivalent now seems to be priced at £135 which is quite a difference. I also bought a set of 3 blades ( 36 / 48 / 60 tooth ) from Saxton Blades for £30. I've only done a few test cuts in some glued up pine panels ( 25mm thick ) and the 48 tooth blade cuts very cleanly. My only gripe is that because the replacement blades are thinner ( 2mm ) then the riving knife has a tendency to just bump the side of the cut at the start. It's not serious but I'll need to see if there's any adjustment at all.
I bought the Parkside Plunge Saw last week on an impulse, always fancied a plunge saw, then saw (pun intended) this in Lidl for £75 quid. Then the add-on urge starts, the want for a longer rail, the want for clamps. So short story long, I purchased a set of Evolution ST2800 rails with 2x clamps and a storage bag included from Screwfix. I didn't like parting with £85 quid as it was more than the saw, but I did want the option to rip an 8ft. sheet in one pass without the need to move the track along. I have to say that these tracks are superb quality and well worth the buy. They break down to 2x 1400mm. rails, so now I have the option to use one of the rails that came with the saw as a 700mm. rail, one of the new rails for 1400mm, or both for 2800mm. I've not tried to see if both sets are compatible to join together as I see no real need if working with 8 x 4 sheet material. The only disappointment was with the set of clamps, they are not of the best construction, but they will do the job, they are after all just for nipping the track down, not gluing up 4x2 timber. One other good point, the track is joined by 2 joining bars in parallel grooves. this will hold the track very firm at the joint without fear of it opening at the joint into a dogleg. As you can probably tell, I am very impressed now with the setup and newfound versatility.
Hello, Thanks for your video. I've got the old parkside Plunge saw and I wish you made some more test like about the dust collection or comparing cuts. Just wanted to point out that I've milled the edge of the rail I've bought (Orange Evolution or Triton longue Rail) and did use a router for the job. Also It fit the festool rail as well.
I have both a Mafell and a Lidl tracksaw, which I use for rough work. The problem I have is that the blade on the Lidl saw has seized solid and cannot be replaced. Nightmare...other than that it has performed ok..
Hello there Peter. I'm glad you got the new version with the Rivingknife this time in the UK. I think the Problem with the odd shape of the guiderails has something to do with Patents. If they don't add something to the rail they end up with an original festoolpatern or at least something which might lead to court. And i also think thats an reason why makita has those antitippinglip on their rails. It's not only because of the antitipfunction of their saw but also because they had to add something to make a difference to festool. Otherwise they would need a liscense from festool. The same goes for evolution that's why they have the two tslots faceing down. Great follow up though. Cheers 😉
Thanks Tobias! Yes, I’m sure patents come into it - but the Makita-pattern rail is widely copied, I’d be surprised if there were licence fees applied. 🤷♂️👍
You cannot use a patented design and simply add to it to make it license free. To get a patent for anything it has to have a feature that is not very obvious but needed a certain amount of grey matter to arrive at. Look at all the patent litigation in electronics. It is always about somebody using your design in a different machine. Look also at Gardena hose connectors. Since the patent has expired everybody uses the idea but has a house color applied to it. Would not have been possible if the patent was still valid (20 years maximum).
@@tobiasbromund5464 Perhaps they wanted to improve the design and/or make people buy only their parts. They have proably ordered a lot of tracks which would sit as shelve queens if a better alternative is available.
Festool patents on the rails are long expired. Makita anti tip is an additional feature, and for the Evolution ones the slots both face the bottom as it is easier to join them together this way and to be honest at the time we over looked the additional accessories that use the upturned slot. From the Design Project manager at Evolution :) We are working on Gen 2 Tracks with some tweaks from customer feedback which will be available in the near future
Thanks for the videos, very useful! I tried to change the blade of my parkside plunge saw, but the hex bolt is completely stripped. I'm correct that it's a normal right hand thread bolt right? Do you know the size of the bolt so I can order a replacement as I drill out the stripped one, which seems like my only option left unfortunately. @10MinuteWorkshop
Bad day today, the riving knife did not retract properly during a plunge cut, which sparked a kickback that badly damaged the material I was working on. After the incident, I removed the whole riving knife mechanism, no biggie. So I absolutely recommend doing this prior to your first plunge cut, before wasting material worth more than the saw itself (like I did today)
I agree completely the Mac Allister Plunge Saw is better, however the Lidl Parkside Plunge Saw does come with a 3 year guarantee, whereas the Mac Allister has only 1 year guarantee, maybe that might not put people off but it is a great guarantee from Lidl.
Yes I mentioned the warranty difference in Fridays video about the MacAllister - and it’s a 2 year warranty on the Big Mac, regardless of what Screwfix may are on their website. 👍👍
@@10MinuteWorkshop Ahhh, that's good to know because I would prefer the Big Mac, I have two cordless drills and an impact driver which are Mac Allisters, so thanks for letting me know, I assume its a manufacturers warranty for 2 years. To be honest through experience if a power took has a fault it usually manifests itself when they are new rather than 2 years down the line. Good to know and thanks.
Heh cheers mate just confirmed my purchase of the Macallister which arrived later today. Not yet tried it will do tomorrow and let you know how I got on as soon as I can. Thanks Peter.
Could'nt help but notice you have a new table saw? Your content is so useful for people starting out wanting entry level tools. Keep up the good work peter. Is there going to be any new projects soon?
Got mine! Sadly taken it back, as it had a huge bump in the sole making it see-saw on the track. None left for exchange. Bah. However I’m now sold on the track saw idea so will be picking something up, thanks for the video series Peter!
@@10MinuteWorkshop Thank you Peter for this video. I just bought mine today in The Netherlands for also € 99,- and was pretty dissapointed to find out the base plate ( or sole...) is made out of plastic(!) Did the previous model had a metal one?
The German word for the riving knife is Keil....it's literal meaning is 'wedge' and it's the same word as used for a ships' keel - so I think that's where the spacer wedge translation comes from, as on a saw it has a similar guiding/stabilizing function as a ships keel.
Not correct. "Keil" (pronounced kyle) is wedge and "Kiel" (pronounced keel) is keel. Two completely different words and also two completely different things in German. English speakers confuse the order of German diphtongs all the time. It is very different in the German language whether you have "ie" which is pronounced like "e" or whether you have "ei" which is pronounced like "Aye / I ". Fun fact: If an egg (Ei) has gone bad you say eeh ("iih"). The reason for the riving knife, which is a gap wedge in German ("Spaltkeil") ist to keep the two parts of a saw cut apart from each other. With green wood the sides of a cut tend to close in after the sawblade has made the initial cut. The wood tends to pinge the blade's end. If it clamps the teeth the rotation will push the workpiece forward (against the direction of the already made cut) and can really hurt you if you are standing there. Which is normally the case at a table saw. You push the sheet with your hands just to overcome the saw's cutting force. But when the pinge happens there will be an instantaneousely much larger force. It will slide the sheet out of your hands and throw it against you hip/belly whatever is in the way. So the riving knife needs to be an itty bit thicker than the teeth on the sawblade in oder to prevent the clamping action. Safety first! But this should be known to everybody before he even operates a table saw. With a plunge saw you are standing besides the sawcut and not in its projected extension. So the riving knife prevents the workpiece becoming a projectile. But you are not in its path. Might be helpful but not defusing as dangerous a situation as on a table saw. Best Manfred from Germany
Am I right in thinking that if it weren't for that little anti tip bit sticking out, the parkside would fit on a makita track? If so then I don't think it would be terribly difficult to remove that bit of the track with a router or table saw.
Just looking at blade replacement and came across 'Hook angle' . It seems a negative Hook angle is preferred for Plung Saws, which pushes the price up. Is this something, in your experince, that is worth considering?
Hi Peter, just wanted to let you know this saw has only now become available from Lidl in The Netherlands. The spare rails are not available yet. Sent an email out already to acquire hem as soon as possible.
Hi Peter, I had the Aldi version for £50 after I watched your track saw series and it paid for itself in about 3hrs work lol such a great opportunity for people starting out now isn't it, with these machines being available.
Careful if you intend to swap blades with branded saws such as bosh or using bosh blades ect. The bore sizes tend to be different on the cheaper saws so they can tie you in. Screwfix also do this with dewalt batteries they won't always fit another dewalt product bought from another retailer again to tie you in.
@@10MinuteWorkshop Maybe it changed in recent years, however, when I was working in the tool trade we got it a lot with tradespeople complaining about this issue.
Nipped by my local LIDL today (Monday) just to take a closer look on the off chance they had any left, there were still 3 of them sitting on the shelf. I wonder how long they will last out
So I have this saw and had to Dremel out the screw holding the blade. Doing so damaged also the outer flange / arbor washer. Does someone know where to get a replacement ? Or is there another alternative ?
Cheers Pete ....... looks like macalister it is mate 👍 thanks for going to the effort mste. Question were do you manage to store all the tracksaws you've purchased for this series 👍
Doesn’t the riiving knife get in the way if you want to cut out a worktop for a sink?, Sorry I see someone else asked , and you explained it was sprung, thanks for the info!
Thanks for that and the Friday review as currently thinking about getting a plunge saw as the wife wants me to make some wardrobes. Currently have a £50 BQ voucher which means being able to get the MacAllister for 50.
Hi Peter, recently bought an excel plunge saw as my Makita broke down past repair. On another RUclips video from another Chanel it mentioned it was compatible with a Makita rail but it's not. Do you know what tracks are compatible? It looks similar to a parkside base. Please let me know . Thank you
It's a big issue with this pattern of saw - Einhell, parkside, Excel, Lumberjack etc... You best bet is the new G2 guiderails from evolution - I've just done a video about them 'new saw new tracks' Great value!👍
Is anyone else annoyed by the box shape? It's as if it's telling you: throw me away after unpacking! I'd rather they sold it in two boxes - better yet, as two separate products: that way, if you chose to go for a longer track you could or you could just buy an alternative track etc.
Hi Martin! Suffering after a trip to the dentist, but otherwise all OK thanks! Yes, the Parkside and MacMister both run in Festool and Evolution rails. The MacAllister will also work perfectly on Makita-pattern rails (Excel, Triton, Titan etc…) but the Parkside will not. Hope that makes sense! 👍
@Peter Millard The 2022 version that I've just picked up this morning is a PTSS 1200 D2 (rather than C2), can't see any obvious differences at first glance, just a tenner dearer 😂
Tricky one tbh. Parkside is a great price, but as noted here won’t work out of the box with the most common pattern of additional guide rails. The Triton is quite a lot more money, but is essentially a dead ringer for the Titan/MacAllister but with soft start and a slightly bigger motor, and has Makita-pattern rails as standard. If spare parts availability is important to you then the Triton’s the winner, but it’s not a clear cut decision, I’m afraid. In terms of quality of cut and general usability I’d say there’s not much real difference between them. 🤷♂️👍
At the moment the Lidl Track is ok but, should I need to buy a Makita Track for its accessories, could I not just cut the edge from the Parkside Tracksaw base to make it fit? That shouldn't effect its operation
You could, it it’s much easier to trim the silly lip off the Makita track. See How to Trim a GuideRail - and why you’d want to! [video 468] ruclips.net/video/QqTJ4SrRD1M/видео.html 👍
It'll do it, but you'll want to change the stock blade for something better, and considering the price of worktops, I'd invest in a better saw, personally.
I can't handle this Peter. No vid friday before last then boom boom shake the room one friday one sunday. I now don't know who I am or what my name is... thanks Peter.
I just bought the latest version for €99 today in Ireland, the PTSS 1200 D2, I wonder what the differences are in the latest revision? I haven't used it yet but it certainly looks impressive and feels like good quality.
From the photos I've seen it looks identical to the 2021 model, to the extent that it wasn't worth me picking one up to test. 👍 Solid little saw, though the usual caveats re quality control (you're it) apply with all these supermarket saws, of course.
Hey Peter, would u advise on best entry level track saw, considering any reasonable upgrades, with a leaning on best cut? I know of Titan, MacAlister, ShopFox, Wen series. I'm thinking between Titan and Wen! I'm going to be building kitchen cabinets.
Hi Sidney. Sorry, but I’m not familiar with brands like shop fox and wen, so can’t really comment. Titan was discontinued a while back, replaced y the MacAllister, which remains my recommendation as an entry-level plunge saw - see the previous video to this one for the comparison. 👍👍
We don’t have Aldi/Lidl here in the US so these sort of bargains are beyond us. I’ve seen Paul Sellers do a Aldi/Lidl chisel set too. I wonder if there’s an opportunity for you to do a ‘Middle Aisle Cabinetry’ video where you *only* use tools you got from Aldi/Lidl?
Anyone know if the £13.63 for extra Parkside rail is for a single or a set of two? Worth to get as spare rails for other plunge saws e.g. to work with MacAllister ones? I'm thinking maybe have different set of rails to go with a different blade set...
I just checked this morning and yes it will, no problem. I think there was a retailer somewhere in the Netherlands that did the Parkside pattern rails in 1400mm lengths as well! 👍
Never used, held or even seen one tbh. But it looks a lot like the rest of the entry-level saws, particularly the Einhell & Parkside, so I would expect it to be decent enough, but to be greatly improved by fitting a better blade. One think I noticed in photos is that it appears to ship with Lidl Parkside -pattern rails, so not the regular Excel rails which I do rate highly. The issue with that is that the Parkside saw won’t fit Makita-pattern rails - the anti-tipping lip gets in the way - so I’d be cautious about making a purchase until you can confirm wether the excel saw has the same problem, since it really does restrict your choices of additional rails. HTH P. Edited to add: just seen a review of the saw in the T4T website that would appear to confirm that the saw doesn’t fit the excel 1500 rails. 🤷♂️
@@10MinuteWorkshop Thank you. I didn't spot that. I am thinking Macallister saw with 2 x 1400 Excel rails (which are currently out of stock but coming soon) or the Evolution rails.:)
Peter should the base plate be totally flat? Picked mine up yesterday and when setting it up noticed a slight bend front to back on the blade side. Causes a slight rock when in the track.
The supplies blade is perfectly decent, but the Triton 48t blade is my go-to upgrade replacement at this size. Costs about £10-12 there’s a link in the description of Friday’s MacAllister video. 👍
Peter ,do you know the difference between the Makita and the festool saw there's something the Makita does and the festool doesn't ,i only wish i would have bought the cordless Makita instead of the corded ,but that parkside does look nice ,wouldnt feel bad letting a crew use it before paying high dollar for the other guys
Thanks Syd. I’ve had a Makita for a while, and the only thing I can think of is the anti-tipping baseplate that latches onto the extra lip the Makita rail has. I’m not a fan of that feature generally, but it’s a decent saw. 👍
Hi Peter love watching your channel. I got two 1.4 evolution tracks today for my parkside saw its very tippy on both evolution tracks but perfect on the parkside rails did you find this. In the video it looks like there a perfect fit. Is there any advice you can give as it took 3 weeks to arrive 😭
Appreciate these videos Peter, I bought the Parkside a few years ago based on your previous review. Have you replaced the splinter guard and friction strip for the track? I can't find a replacement. I've heard tale that the Festool stuff works...
I also bought one this morning , having never used one before I'll be going over your videos later on tonight.
For anyone doubting the build quality of these. We've had one in the shop for the past 2,5 years and it hasn't skipped a beat. It hasn't seen daily use, but it has had it's fair share of abuse, including a few timber framed buildings.
Same. The QC may bae a bit iffy sometimes, but they're good saws. 👍
@@10MinuteWorkshop No, they're not perfect, but it pays for itself on the first job. Hard to argue with that.
We fully expected it to fail at some point, especially after a few full days of full depth trenching cuts in fir, but it just goes if the blade is sharp.
I have the older model without the knive, out of the box it needed some tuning, blade not square to base and not 90 or 45 degree, minor adjustments and it is ok, the biggest problem is the wobble , if you loose the pivot point and fit on both sides shims, in my case 0.15 mm and the wobble was almost gone, with a good blade and a brand bearing it performs just like a Makita for example. And if you realy love your Parkside or other entry level saw you must add a softstart module for sure.
@@xinixxagnix201 overkill bro
@@superherobeatdown lol for 20 euro extra a good saw, a very good saw ;)
I had to grab a blade on the fly for my ts55, could only get a 2.2mm as it was right at the end of the day and finishing the job off. I actually took my riving knife off so I could use the blade on my saw. Wasn’t until seeing this vid that I’ve just remembered I have never refitted it. That was about a year ago !
Great review. You know what I did? I trimmed it, so it fits a Makita guide rail. I used my table saw on the plunge saw and trimmed just a kerf-size off. I used a general purpose cmt blade, so it was 3.2 mm. Quite a lot. Almost to the button. But it doesn't matter, since it runs perfectly. It's not my idea, I saw it in a youtube video.
I have a Parkside saw, it has been in use for 4 years,
I use the evolution rail, use it complete my self build house, no issues.
Used for hundreds of hours. I did change the bade tooth size immediately for hard woods.
I've used my TS55 to cut sheets on 2 trestles many times and many times I've been very grateful for the riving knife
Another useful video. One other benefit to a riving knife is found when you cut narrow strips, and want to keep the offcut, as in cutting for a woodstrip canoe. Without a riving knife, the strips wobble into the back of the blade, leaving a rough surface. A riving knife leaves them clean and smooth.
I have had the lidl one for a couple of years now. It is a very useful tool for breaking down sheet goods. I just used it today as a matter of fact to make panels to line the walls of my daughter's Wendy House.
I bought mine today after a long wait. As a power tool user of 60 years I cannot fault it. And why this pre occupation with whose tracks it will fit. The tracks supplied are readily available and excellent. The most important matter is the correct setting up procedures on saw benches, Bandsaw and planers and I suggest watching Craig Steel on Bandsaw at Axminster Power Tools as an example. Amazingly I have one niggle. The instructions have omitted the instructions do not mention the correct procedures for aligning the cam type followers on the machine which follow the track. They also do not mention the Allen screws which secure them, nor do they provide an Allen key to fit them. If these are correctly aligned the blade will run exactly parallel with the edge of the track and improve the finish of the cut and possibly even reduce the chance of kickback. With regard to the blade I never use blades with less than 48 teeth on saw benches or mitre saws but it is essential if you change the blade to remain with the same thickness blade and the last blades I bought came from Parkside and they are excellent. I bought 6 at 4 pounds each. They are as good as blades which cost me 50 pounds.
It’s an obsession brought about by the endless questions from viewers. 👍 And all the set-up is included in the tracksaw workshop series of videos. 👍👍
Good video Peter. ‘Next week Peter makes a simple but very large display cabinet for the biggest Tracksaw collection in the WORLD’ (said in Clarkson style)
Thanks Norman! And you won’t believe what happens next.... 😂👍👍
@@10MinuteWorkshop Hahaha well played. "Peter bought another track saw, then THIS happened" :D Also, not in the world had I expected Lidl to put a riving knife to their saw. My 4x the price Makita does not have one. Then again, it has downsides and I don't need it, so... optional would propably be ideal, but isn't optional always ideal.
...and if only the tracks were compatible, he'd have a new mode of transport!
@10MinuteWorkshop can you confirm the size of the hex bolt that holds the blade, and that it's a normal threaded bolt? Mine's completely stripped so I have to drill it out and need to buy a replacement.
I’ve just bought one of these on Saturday, I was all set to buy the Mac Allister saw after watching your previous video, that was until Lidl opened a new store on the 29th of July just over 2 miles away… a Leaflet dropped through the door as I was about to leave for screwfix (31st of July) it had a bunch of “grand opening deals” one of which was for one day only.. the plunge saw was £34.99 😯 I’ve never moved so fast..
as I’ve never used a plunge saw before but find I need one for a project, this will be ideal to learn with. I’ll be watching your other videos shortly
Bargain! 👍👍
I have a 2 lidl saws (sorry 3) and they all do what it says on the tin. I am not a proessional user only as a diy capacity but i have no complaints at all.
Looks almost identical to an entry level track saw sold here is the US at Menards for $200US. I’m pretty happy with mine.
Yes for price no one can beat lidl
i bought this saw yesterday. here in ireland, they have only just been put on sale (2021/07/15). what a great saw. saw and two 700mm tracks for €90.
Great value! 👍
Peter, I have filed my base plate on mine so it runs on my Triton track. Very easy to use, just a small bevel does the job.
Good to know, thanks! I think I’d be more inclined to take the lip off the rail, but whatever works! 👍👍
As it seems difficult to get tracks from the manufacturer direct at the moment (apparently they were available very reasonably priced, even including shipping from Germany but have been unavailable for a good while now), I thought I'd say that the Draper tracks (available on Amazon) seem to be identical to the Parkside ones, and I'm pretty sure the Lumber Jack and Excel (difficult to source atm as well) are as well.
Thanks, yes - the additional rails for all the Einhell-pattern saws - Parkside, Lumberjack, Excel, Rutlands etc… - have always been a bit of a challenge, especially as you can’t use the more common Makita-pattern rails. Wasn’t aware of the Draoer rails, thanks. The new Evolution G2 rails - video out later today - are the better option though. 👍
U could make rails to suit urself ,these saws are good for what u would be doing
I finally got it from our local Lidl store. Can't wait to find a project for it. Will be looking into 1400mm single piece rails tho.
I like my Makita simply because I can reverse the blade arbor bushing, and use a cheaper, more widely available 5/8" bore thin kerf blade, as opposed to a metric blade.
Is it easy enough to do and what are there advantages in using the 5/8" bore blades?
Interested
I must admit, when I was in Lidl today and saw it did indeed have a riving knife I picked one up to replace my older one.
Even if it doesnt do much at least I'm getting a fresh 3 year warranty!
Yep - hard to argue with that - and a spare saw - for £70! 👍
re: Evolution ST1400 guide rail. I ordered a set of these on 28th May and have been informed by Amazon that they are arriving tomorrow 7th June. Tracking shows them originating in Italy.
Good to know thanks! 👍
I got sent replacement evo rails that arrived end of May but they did take 2 months to come. I damaged the rail slightly because the 2 rails were never cut square on the join and I forced the saw through join which wasn’t square it jumped out and damaged the rail. I sent evo some photos and they sent the new 1400 rails to me. Good company to deal with to be fair. Did you have any issue with unsquare joints on the rails?
@@whenshovelswereshovels3068 I had the same. Ends not cut square on the 1400 rails. A small error makes a big difference over 2800mm! Couldn’t wait for a replacement - wondered about using the mitre saw to square them up but settled for a file and patience!
@@mikerussell6469 ye mate exact trouble I had and I was cutting full sheet of wet wall at the time! I then put my 2 metre level along the side of the joined rails and realised how off the square they were. I do now have 2 sets of rails which is great but will have to file all of them square like you said.
Thanks to the excellent reviews and guides on this channel I've finally taken the plunge ( ha! ) and bought a Lidl Parkside track saw. I paid £79.99 but the cheap Mac Allister equivalent now seems to be priced at £135 which is quite a difference. I also bought a set of 3 blades ( 36 / 48 / 60 tooth ) from Saxton Blades for £30. I've only done a few test cuts in some glued up pine panels ( 25mm thick ) and the 48 tooth blade cuts very cleanly. My only gripe is that because the replacement blades are thinner ( 2mm ) then the riving knife has a tendency to just bump the side of the cut at the start. It's not serious but I'll need to see if there's any adjustment at all.
Least I know to buy the cordless macalister now cheers bud
Thanks Peter 👍 I’ll stick with my festool TS 55 👍👍👍👍
I bought the Parkside Plunge Saw last week on an impulse, always fancied a plunge saw, then saw (pun intended) this in Lidl for £75 quid. Then the add-on urge starts, the want for a longer rail, the want for clamps. So short story long, I purchased a set of Evolution ST2800 rails with 2x clamps and a storage bag included from Screwfix. I didn't like parting with £85 quid as it was more than the saw, but I did want the option to rip an 8ft. sheet in one pass without the need to move the track along. I have to say that these tracks are superb quality and well worth the buy. They break down to 2x 1400mm. rails, so now I have the option to use one of the rails that came with the saw as a 700mm. rail, one of the new rails for 1400mm, or both for 2800mm. I've not tried to see if both sets are compatible to join together as I see no real need if working with 8 x 4 sheet material. The only disappointment was with the set of clamps, they are not of the best construction, but they will do the job, they are after all just for nipping the track down, not gluing up 4x2 timber. One other good point, the track is joined by 2 joining bars in parallel grooves. this will hold the track very firm at the joint without fear of it opening at the joint into a dogleg. As you can probably tell, I am very impressed now with the setup and newfound versatility.
got it just used it yesterday first time, just work as expected.
That saw fits on the evolution tracks and they fit together with the Parkside ones too.
Oh too early lol
Here in Belgium it had the riving knife in 2020. The price was a little higher than yours in the UK.
PTSS 1200 C2 was available for quite some time, but only in selected markets.
@@ciptrofin I thought so . Ik have this one for almost a year.
Hello, Thanks for your video. I've got the old parkside Plunge saw and I wish you made some more test like about the dust collection or comparing cuts. Just wanted to point out that I've milled the edge of the rail I've bought (Orange Evolution or Triton longue Rail) and did use a router for the job. Also It fit the festool rail as well.
I’ve done many previous videos on all aspects of this saw - see the tracksaw workshop playlist for all tracksaw-related vids. 👍👍
Wow you're spoiling us this week.
I dunno Dafydd - I skip a week, then end up putting out two vids over a weekend, lol! 👍
I have both a Mafell and a Lidl tracksaw, which I use for rough work. The problem I have is that the blade on the Lidl saw has seized solid and cannot be replaced. Nightmare...other than that it has performed ok..
Hello there Peter. I'm glad you got the new version with the Rivingknife this time in the UK. I think the Problem with the odd shape of the guiderails has something to do with Patents. If they don't add something to the rail they end up with an original festoolpatern or at least something which might lead to court. And i also think thats an reason why makita has those antitippinglip on their rails. It's not only because of the antitipfunction of their saw but also because they had to add something to make a difference to festool. Otherwise they would need a liscense from festool. The same goes for evolution that's why they have the two tslots faceing down. Great follow up though. Cheers 😉
Thanks Tobias! Yes, I’m sure patents come into it - but the Makita-pattern rail is widely copied, I’d be surprised if there were licence fees applied. 🤷♂️👍
You cannot use a patented design and simply add to it to make it license free. To get a patent for anything it has to have a feature that is not very obvious but needed a certain amount of grey matter to arrive at. Look at all the patent litigation in electronics. It is always about somebody using your design in a different machine. Look also at Gardena hose connectors. Since the patent has expired everybody uses the idea but has a house color applied to it. Would not have been possible if the patent was still valid (20 years maximum).
Yeah this was the only plausible answer i could think of. Otherwise i cannot figure out a reason for those odd shaped rails.
@@tobiasbromund5464 Perhaps they wanted to improve the design and/or make people buy only their parts. They have proably ordered a lot of tracks which would sit as shelve queens if a better alternative is available.
Festool patents on the rails are long expired. Makita anti tip is an additional feature, and for the Evolution ones the slots both face the bottom as it is easier to join them together this way and to be honest at the time we over looked the additional accessories that use the upturned slot. From the Design Project manager at Evolution :)
We are working on Gen 2 Tracks with some tweaks from customer feedback which will be available in the near future
Thanks for the videos, very useful! I tried to change the blade of my parkside plunge saw, but the hex bolt is completely stripped. I'm correct that it's a normal right hand thread bolt right? Do you know the size of the bolt so I can order a replacement as I drill out the stripped one, which seems like my only option left unfortunately. @10MinuteWorkshop
Great, quick review... going to watch more 👍
Luckily Lidl have just moved to town and one of the special offers was 2021 Plunge saw for £29.99!! Happy Bunny
Result! 🙌👍
Bad day today, the riving knife did not retract properly during a plunge cut, which sparked a kickback that badly damaged the material I was working on. After the incident, I removed the whole riving knife mechanism, no biggie. So I absolutely recommend doing this prior to your first plunge cut, before wasting material worth more than the saw itself (like I did today)
Thanks, Great video
I agree completely the Mac Allister Plunge Saw is better, however the Lidl Parkside Plunge Saw does come with a 3 year guarantee, whereas the Mac Allister has only 1 year guarantee, maybe that might not put people off but it is a great guarantee from Lidl.
Yes I mentioned the warranty difference in Fridays video about the MacAllister - and it’s a 2 year warranty on the Big Mac, regardless of what Screwfix may are on their website. 👍👍
@@10MinuteWorkshop Ahhh, that's good to know because I would prefer the Big Mac, I have two cordless drills and an impact driver which are Mac Allisters, so thanks for letting me know, I assume its a manufacturers warranty for 2 years. To be honest through experience if a power took has a fault it usually manifests itself when they are new rather than 2 years down the line. Good to know and thanks.
Excellent video! Thanks for taking the time queue up and then share your 'out of the box' experience. You must be seeing tracksaws in your sleep!
Yep! 😆 👍👍
Heh cheers mate just confirmed my purchase of the Macallister which arrived later today. Not yet tried it will do tomorrow and let you know how I got on as soon as I can. Thanks Peter.
Sometimes you folks over in Europe get all the cool new toys.
Haha, rarely - but sometimes! 😂👍
Thank you that was very useful as I'm looking at the best one to by even though I'm entry level I'd prefer to have a more universal decent one. 🙂
I'm going to buy this. You are a nice guy 👍
Genuinely true. Straight forward and talking good man. Peace and love to you, your family and channel 👍
Thank you. Same to you too! 🙌
First thing to fail on my Aldi saw was the riving knife loosed and caught on my work.
Bugger to dismantle and refit
Could'nt help but notice you have a new table saw? Your content is so useful for people starting out wanting entry level tools. Keep up the good work peter. Is there going to be any new projects soon?
Thanks! Tabke saw’s quite old now - must get around to using it sometime!
You should revisit this no that the Mac Allister is £135!!! Lidl currently on sale in stores at £74
Got mine!
Sadly taken it back, as it had a huge bump in the sole making it see-saw on the track. None left for exchange. Bah.
However I’m now sold on the track saw idea so will be picking something up, thanks for the video series Peter!
That’s a shame. Right thing to do though - it would never sit right in the track and would never cut consistently. 👍👍
@@10MinuteWorkshop Thank you Peter for this video. I just bought mine today in The Netherlands for also € 99,- and was pretty dissapointed to find out the base plate ( or sole...) is made out of plastic(!) Did the previous model had a metal one?
The German word for the riving knife is Keil....it's literal meaning is 'wedge' and it's the same word as used for a ships' keel - so I think that's where the spacer wedge translation comes from, as on a saw it has a similar guiding/stabilizing function as a ships keel.
Ah, thanks! 👍👍
Not correct. "Keil" (pronounced kyle) is wedge and "Kiel" (pronounced keel) is keel. Two completely different words and also two completely different things in German. English speakers confuse the order of German diphtongs all the time. It is very different in the German language whether you have "ie" which is pronounced like "e" or whether you have "ei" which is pronounced like "Aye / I ". Fun fact: If an egg (Ei) has gone bad you say eeh ("iih").
The reason for the riving knife, which is a gap wedge in German ("Spaltkeil") ist to keep the two parts of a saw cut apart from each other. With green wood the sides of a cut tend to close in after the sawblade has made the initial cut. The wood tends to pinge the blade's end. If it clamps the teeth the rotation will push the workpiece forward (against the direction of the already made cut) and can really hurt you if you are standing there. Which is normally the case at a table saw. You push the sheet with your hands just to overcome the saw's cutting force. But when the pinge happens there will be an instantaneousely much larger force. It will slide the sheet out of your hands and throw it against you hip/belly whatever is in the way. So the riving knife needs to be an itty bit thicker than the teeth on the sawblade in oder to prevent the clamping action. Safety first!
But this should be known to everybody before he even operates a table saw.
With a plunge saw you are standing besides the sawcut and not in its projected extension. So the riving knife prevents the workpiece becoming a projectile. But you are not in its path. Might be helpful but not defusing as dangerous a situation as on a table saw.
Best Manfred from Germany
@@V100-e5q 👍
@@V100-e5q In fact, on the Italian website it's called "cuneo" (= wedge).
Am I right in thinking that if it weren't for that little anti tip bit sticking out, the parkside would fit on a makita track? If so then I don't think it would be terribly difficult to remove that bit of the track with a router or table saw.
Or a plunge saw, if you had one... 🤔
@@10MinuteWorkshop 😂
thanks for posting these Peter. I was wondering whether I should "upgrade" or not but my current parkside one is still chugging along (touch wood).
Yes, I probably should have said; nothing here to upgrade for IMHO. 👍👍
Just nipped out and bought one... Let the games begin.
👍
Just looking at blade replacement and came across 'Hook angle' . It seems a negative Hook angle is preferred for Plung Saws, which pushes the price up. Is this something, in your experince, that is worth considering?
How does the evolution rail perform on the parkside plunge saw and the makita circular saw?
Thanks Peter
👍👍
Hi Peter, just wanted to let you know this saw has only now become available from Lidl in The Netherlands. The spare rails are not available yet. Sent an email out already to acquire hem as soon as possible.
Thank you! Good to know!
Hi Peter, I had the Aldi version for £50 after I watched your track saw series and it paid for itself in about 3hrs work lol such a great opportunity for people starting out now isn't it, with these machines being available.
Hey Karl. Yes, even though I wasn't a fan of the Aldi, you can't beat that kind of price - or the quality of cut! 👍
Guys, the brand ‘Scheppach’ sells 1400mm guiderails that fit with the saw
They really don’t. Which Rail Works? Guiderail compatibility [video #403] - ruclips.net/video/_HtpT_bK7zw/видео.html
Careful if you intend to swap blades with branded saws such as bosh or using bosh blades ect. The bore sizes tend to be different on the cheaper saws so they can tie you in. Screwfix also do this with dewalt batteries they won't always fit another dewalt product bought from another retailer again to tie you in.
I have a lot plunge saws, many of them entry-level, and I’ve never come across a single one that wasn’t 160/165 x 20mm bore. 🤷♂️👍
@@10MinuteWorkshop Maybe it changed in recent years, however, when I was working in the tool trade we got it a lot with tradespeople complaining about this issue.
Nipped by my local LIDL today (Monday) just to take a closer look on the off chance they had any left, there were still 3 of them sitting on the shelf. I wonder how long they will last out
Not long! 👍
So I have this saw and had to Dremel out the screw holding the blade. Doing so damaged also the outer flange / arbor washer. Does someone know where to get a replacement ? Or is there another alternative ?
Thanks for another fantastic review.
Great review Peter . And great channel . Your videos are invaluable for a lot of us who haven't used this kind of kit . Brilliant stuff ! Thanks
Cheers Pete ....... looks like macalister it is mate 👍 thanks for going to the effort mste. Question were do you manage to store all the tracksaws you've purchased for this series 👍
Cheers Dan! They live under the bench for now - but I have plans! 😂👍
Doesn’t the riiving knife get in the way if you want to cut out a worktop for a sink?, Sorry I see someone else asked , and you explained it was sprung, thanks for the info!
Awesome video :)! thanks. Wonder if the Triton TTS48TCG fits on this since the riving knife looks pretty thick.
Thanks for that and the Friday review as currently thinking about getting a plunge saw as the wife wants me to make some wardrobes. Currently have a £50 BQ voucher which means being able to get the MacAllister for 50.
Hi Peter, recently bought an excel plunge saw as my Makita broke down past repair. On another RUclips video from another Chanel it mentioned it was compatible with a Makita rail but it's not. Do you know what tracks are compatible? It looks similar to a parkside base. Please let me know . Thank you
It's a big issue with this pattern of saw - Einhell, parkside, Excel, Lumberjack etc... You best bet is the new G2 guiderails from evolution - I've just done a video about them 'new saw new tracks' Great value!👍
Is anyone else annoyed by the box shape? It's as if it's telling you: throw me away after unpacking! I'd rather they sold it in two boxes - better yet, as two separate products: that way, if you chose to go for a longer track you could or you could just buy an alternative track etc.
Cut off the weird part, and added some duct tape so it stays in one place a bit longer, and now it "has" a box :)
Stick it in a stackable and hang the rails on the wall
Just “discovered” your channel. Great content!
I’m waiting since 2019 for Lidl having a track saw for sale (Portuguese stores).
Thanks, and welcome! 👍👍
Hey Peter, so if I get this right the MacAllister will fit my Evolution rails and so will this Parkside? Is that correct? Cheers - hope all's well.
Hi Martin! Suffering after a trip to the dentist, but otherwise all OK thanks! Yes, the Parkside and MacMister both run in Festool and Evolution rails. The MacAllister will also work perfectly on Makita-pattern rails (Excel, Triton, Titan etc…) but the Parkside will not. Hope that makes sense! 👍
@@10MinuteWorkshop thanks Peter - very helpful!
Good review thanks for your video 👍👍
Available from the 28th August 2022. Will you be reviewing please Mr M ?
I’ll take a look, but it’ll depend on what’s changed from last year. 👍
@Peter Millard The 2022 version that I've just picked up this morning is a PTSS 1200 D2 (rather than C2), can't see any obvious differences at first glance, just a tenner dearer 😂
Do you think would it be worth the extra money to but the triton tracksaw or the parkside? Thanks
Tricky one tbh. Parkside is a great price, but as noted here won’t work out of the box with the most common pattern of additional guide rails. The Triton is quite a lot more money, but is essentially a dead ringer for the Titan/MacAllister but with soft start and a slightly bigger motor, and has Makita-pattern rails as standard. If spare parts availability is important to you then the Triton’s the winner, but it’s not a clear cut decision, I’m afraid. In terms of quality of cut and general usability I’d say there’s not much real difference between them. 🤷♂️👍
At the moment the Lidl Track is ok but, should I need to buy a Makita Track for its accessories, could I not just cut the edge from the Parkside Tracksaw base to make it fit? That shouldn't effect its operation
You could, it it’s much easier to trim the silly lip off the Makita track. See How to Trim a GuideRail - and why you’d want to! [video 468]
ruclips.net/video/QqTJ4SrRD1M/видео.html
👍
It feels like Groundhog day... till all the entry level plunge saws are covered in complete details you'll be condemned to publish new videos 😁
Doesn't it though! 😂 👍
Hi is this good for cutting 40mm laminated chipboard kitchen worktops?
It'll do it, but you'll want to change the stock blade for something better, and considering the price of worktops, I'd invest in a better saw, personally.
I kept putting off buying one, but when Lidl suddenly offered them at half price (59Euro) I could resist no more and bought one.
I can't handle this Peter. No vid friday before last then boom boom shake the room one friday one sunday. I now don't know who I am or what my name is... thanks Peter.
Me neither! 😂👍👍
hi thanks for the video you mentioned a link to purchase the extra rails any chance of having it as i can't seem to locate it thanks
In the description, 2nd paragraph 👍. Extra Lidl rails available here - www.kompernass.com/en/accessories/843/guide-rail
I want a longer rail, where can u buy a longer one. Or what other brand has the same rail?
Which Rail Works? A guide to guiderail compatibility [video #403]
ruclips.net/video/_HtpT_bK7zw/видео.html
Hi. Do you know the date these will be coming back into store this year? Thanks
No idea; if you sign up to the Lidl newsletter you get advance notice, I believe. 👍
I just bought the latest version for €99 today in Ireland, the PTSS 1200 D2, I wonder what the differences are in the latest revision? I haven't used it yet but it certainly looks impressive and feels like good quality.
From the photos I've seen it looks identical to the 2021 model, to the extent that it wasn't worth me picking one up to test. 👍 Solid little saw, though the usual caveats re quality control (you're it) apply with all these supermarket saws, of course.
You're spoiling us!
😆 You deserve it! 👍👍
Hey Peter, would u advise on best entry level track saw, considering any reasonable upgrades, with a leaning on best cut? I know of Titan, MacAlister, ShopFox, Wen series. I'm thinking between Titan and Wen! I'm going to be building kitchen cabinets.
Hi Sidney. Sorry, but I’m not familiar with brands like shop fox and wen, so can’t really comment. Titan was discontinued a while back, replaced y the MacAllister, which remains my recommendation as an entry-level plunge saw - see the previous video to this one for the comparison. 👍👍
@@10MinuteWorkshop Hey, thanks much for ur response. Helpful.
We don’t have Aldi/Lidl here in the US so these sort of bargains are beyond us. I’ve seen Paul Sellers do a Aldi/Lidl chisel set too. I wonder if there’s an opportunity for you to do a ‘Middle Aisle Cabinetry’ video where you *only* use tools you got from Aldi/Lidl?
Thanks Frank. Interesting idea, actually, a ‘middle of Lidl’ workshop exclusive! I’ll give it some thought, see what I can come up with. 👍👍
Wonder if Lidl are too tight to sponsor it.... Worth an email Peter
Does the riving knife not get in the way if you're plunging through a kitchen worktop to try to cut out a sink hole? Can you do a plunge cut with it?
It’s sprung
Anyone know if the £13.63 for extra Parkside rail is for a single or a set of two? Worth to get as spare rails for other plunge saws e.g. to work with MacAllister ones? I'm thinking maybe have different set of rails to go with a different blade set...
I believe it's for a pair of 700mm rails, just like the ones supplied. 👍
Dear Peter, would the makita plunge saw fit on the Parkside rail? I am a bit put in off by the price of the makita rail. Groetjes uit Amsterdam.
I just checked this morning and yes it will, no problem. I think there was a retailer somewhere in the Netherlands that did the Parkside pattern rails in 1400mm lengths as well! 👍
@@10MinuteWorkshop phew. That is great to hear. Thanks for looking this up for me!
Peter - Any thoughts on the Excel Track saw- on sail with 2 x 700 rails (which you seem to like} for £105
Never used, held or even seen one tbh. But it looks a lot like the rest of the entry-level saws, particularly the Einhell & Parkside, so I would expect it to be decent enough, but to be greatly improved by fitting a better blade. One think I noticed in photos is that it appears to ship with Lidl Parkside -pattern rails, so not the regular Excel rails which I do rate highly. The issue with that is that the Parkside saw won’t fit Makita-pattern rails - the anti-tipping lip gets in the way - so I’d be cautious about making a purchase until you can confirm wether the excel saw has the same problem, since it really does restrict your choices of additional rails. HTH P.
Edited to add: just seen a review of the saw in the T4T website that would appear to confirm that the saw doesn’t fit the excel 1500 rails. 🤷♂️
@@10MinuteWorkshop Thank you. I didn't spot that. I am thinking Macallister saw with 2 x 1400 Excel rails (which are currently out of stock but coming soon) or the Evolution rails.:)
Great review Peter
Do you have a link where I can find carbon brushes for these by any chance?
Thanks
No, no idea I'm sorry. I'd try Lidl's customer service, see if they can steer you in the right direction. 👍
@@10MinuteWorkshop Thanks for the reply Peter.
I did manage to order one from Kompernass.
Hi I'm from Sweden and Lidl doesn't sell them here. What do you recommend for a newbie hobbyists?
Sorry, I don’t know what’s available in Sweden at the entry level. 🤷♂️
Anyone in the EU can get an extra set of rails delivered for €15.99. I don't know about the uk
Costs a little bit more, but yes the Parkside rails are available - link in description. 👍
Identical to the Draper (no riving knife).
Does the Parkside saw fit the Festool rail please?
Yes, it does, and any Makita-pattern rail. 👍
Peter should the base plate be totally flat? Picked mine up yesterday and when setting it up noticed a slight bend front to back on the blade side. Causes a slight rock when in the track.
Yes, is should sit absolutely flat on the rail. 👍
@@10MinuteWorkshop changed it no problem. Really good bit of kit for the price.
Hi Peter just bought one of the lidl’s
Track saw please could you recommend a decent sawblade mainly for MDF cheers
The supplies blade is perfectly decent, but the Triton 48t blade is my go-to upgrade replacement at this size. Costs about £10-12 there’s a link in the description of Friday’s MacAllister video. 👍
@@10MinuteWorkshop does that width of blade (2.2mm) still work with the thickness of the riving knife?
Peter feel cheated 3.54 short on video 🤣🤣🤣🤣🍺🍺 keep them coming .
Fair. 😂😂👍👍🍻
Peter ,do you know the difference between the Makita and the festool saw there's something the Makita does and the festool doesn't ,i only wish i would have bought the cordless Makita instead of the corded ,but that parkside does look nice ,wouldnt feel bad letting a crew use it before paying high dollar for the other guys
Thanks Syd. I’ve had a Makita for a while, and the only thing I can think of is the anti-tipping baseplate that latches onto the extra lip the Makita rail has. I’m not a fan of that feature generally, but it’s a decent saw. 👍
@@10MinuteWorkshop score cutting before making your cut ,makes for a cleaner finish cuts
Hi Peter love watching your channel. I got two 1.4 evolution tracks today for my parkside saw its very tippy on both evolution tracks but perfect on the parkside rails did you find this. In the video it looks like there a perfect fit. Is there any advice you can give as it took 3 weeks to arrive 😭
Reply just added to your other post Roy. 👍
Appreciate these videos Peter, I bought the Parkside a few years ago based on your previous review. Have you replaced the splinter guard and friction strip for the track? I can't find a replacement. I've heard tale that the Festool stuff works...
I prefer the black rubber Makita splinterguard personally. 👍 Makita 3-metre splinter guard - amzn.to/2TdVApS
@@10MinuteWorkshopMany thanks Peter. I also just ordered another couple of tracks via your link, which will sort the problem in the short term.
Why is my wife also looking to this video? She doesn't woodworki... PETER! Button your shirt, it's to tempting for the ladies
😂😂
Peter how do you find them. Cant find anything lidle
They’re only available a couple of times a year here, unfortunately. When they’re gone, they’re gone. 🤷♂️👍