Reciprocating Saws

Create a review for a woodworking tool that you are familiar with (Shopsmith brand or Non-Shopsmith) or just post your opinion on a specific tool. Head to head comparisons welcome too.

Moderator: admin

ERLover
Platinum Member
Posts: 3914
Joined: Mon Aug 31, 2015 10:19 pm
Location: Greenie and Goldie Country not to metion the WI Badgers!

Re: Reciprocating Saws

Post by ERLover »

John B, Saws All is Milwaukees copy righted name, the rest have to call them reciprocating saws. Same thing with Roller Blades skates, the rest have to call them In Line skates.
KNOWLEDGE AND EXPERIENCE EQUALS WISDOM. Albert Einstein
The Greatness officially starts :D :D :D :D :D :D
Greenie, Grayling, SS stand alone BS and BS SPT, jointer and belt sander, 3 Ers with Speed Changers. I think those 3 cover my ER needs, and space for them. :)
User avatar
JPG
Platinum Member
Posts: 35598
Joined: Wed Dec 10, 2008 7:42 pm
Location: Lexington, Ky (TAMECAT territory)

Re: Reciprocating Saws

Post by JPG »

ERLover wrote:John B, Saws All is Milwaukees copy righted name, the rest have to call them reciprocating saws. Same thing with Roller Blades skates, the rest have to call them In Line skates.

And we all know how that worked out for 'Frigidaire' and 'skilsaw'.
╔═══╗
╟JPG ╢
╚═══╝

Goldie(Bought New SN 377425)/4" jointer/6" beltsander/12" planer/stripsander/bandsaw/powerstation /Scroll saw/Jig saw /Craftsman 10" ras/Craftsman 6" thicknessplaner/ Dayton10"tablesaw(restoredfromneighborstrashpile)/ Mark VII restoration in 'progress'/ 10
E[/size](SN E3779) restoration in progress, a 510 on the back burner and a growing pile of items to be eventually returned to useful life. - aka Red Grange
ERLover
Platinum Member
Posts: 3914
Joined: Mon Aug 31, 2015 10:19 pm
Location: Greenie and Goldie Country not to metion the WI Badgers!

Re: Reciprocating Saws

Post by ERLover »

I am confused about where Milwaukee stuff is made, there main plant and Corporate Offices is about a half mile from moms house, and they are expanding, I dont know what, offices or some manufacturing. They also have a factory rebuilding/repair shop about 1/4 mile away from it.
I bought my first cordless drill, 12V, Milw. in the mid 90s, I needed some work on it, the trigger went bad, when I dropped it off at there repair place, the guy said, Oh a Panasonic model.
KNOWLEDGE AND EXPERIENCE EQUALS WISDOM. Albert Einstein
The Greatness officially starts :D :D :D :D :D :D
Greenie, Grayling, SS stand alone BS and BS SPT, jointer and belt sander, 3 Ers with Speed Changers. I think those 3 cover my ER needs, and space for them. :)
User avatar
BuckeyeDennis
Platinum Member
Posts: 3812
Joined: Tue Jul 24, 2012 10:03 pm
Location: Central Ohio

Re: Reciprocating Saws

Post by BuckeyeDennis »

jsburger wrote:
roy_okc wrote:I bought this Ryobi One+ kit a couple weeks ago for $200, was on a better sale then. I needed a recip saw for some yard work, compared to other battery powered, this wasn't much more and often less.

http://www.homedepot.com/p/Ryobi-ONE-18 ... /203466936

I paired it with a coarse 9" Diablo limb blade, very easy to insert the blade. I used it a couple weekends ago to trim some ice broken limbs plus some other cleanup. It worked fine cutting some stuff up to maybe 5-6" at largest, although it took awhile. It didn't seem that there was too much vibration, this model is supposed to dampen it. I did find the safety switch a bit awkward to engage in some positions.

I have nothing to compare it against, but was nice to not have to drag an extension cord(s) all around my yard. For me, the price was a good balance of expected quality (probably not as good as Milwaukee, Dewalt; probably better than Harbor Freight if they have a battery powered unit).

Other than the impact driver, which seems fine, I've not used the other tools other than to verify that they do indeed run.
For yard work I have a chain saw. No cord, no batteries, lots of power and large cut capacity. I have never thought of a reciprocating saw as a yard tool.
I have both. Matter if fact, that Ryobi kit is a newer version of the one I have, except that I had to buy the vibratory tool when it came out later.

The recip saw does indeed have it's place in landscape maintenance. Sometimes for light cutting, because it's easier to fire up than the chainsaw, or when you're up on a ladder. I find it handy particularly handy for neatly chopping down my dried ornamental grass in the spring, whereas the chainsaw would sling it all over the place and make a huge mess. But it really shines when you need to cut something down in the dirt. Broken irrigitation pipes, tree roots lifting your sidewalk (or simply in the way of digging a hole) etc. Dirt is bad news for a chainsaw. But for a long reciprocating blade, no big deal.
User avatar
Ed in Tampa
Platinum Member
Posts: 5834
Joined: Fri Jul 21, 2006 12:45 am
Location: North Tampa Bay area Florida

Re: Reciprocating Saws

Post by Ed in Tampa »

With the exception of the "cheap" reciprocating saws it depends on blades. Excellent blades provide excellent results, good blades good results and junk blades junk results.

I use my Makita recip. for everything cutting pipe, cutting metal, cutting wood, trimming trees to cutting roots.

If I was going to buy today I would get a brand name. I like Dewalt, Makita, Milwakee, Rigid, Porter Cable
swampgator
Platinum Member
Posts: 1256
Joined: Fri Nov 27, 2009 9:32 pm
Location: Pensacola, FL

Re: Reciprocating Saws

Post by swampgator »

I really hate repeating the same mantra. My 15 year old Dewalt is a horse. It is heavy to me, but the blades are easy to insert and remove. It may be similar to others, but it has a lever on one side and the blades can be inserted either straight up and down or flat so you can cut in almost any direction. Of course, at age 68, it may be heavy to me and not to anyone else. There are many blades to pick from. If you plan on tree and shrubbery trimming, there are pruning blades for that and you can cut a good sized tree down in seconds. I have a couple of palm trees in the yard and it makes a quick job by removing the old freunds. My dear neighbor won't clean her yard and when her rubbish comes across the fence, I get to take it off. Vibration, I allow the saw to pull itself into the tree and just pull on the variable speed trigger until it reaches the speed I prefer. That minimizes the vibration. This type of saw is excellent about reaching in a fence, but you have to be very careful as they will also cut the wire of the fence. These are very reliable and dependable tools. Mine came with a large hinged plastic case and makes it convenient. As long as the blade will reach through a tree like a chain saw, you can cut almost anything like mulberry, pine, mimosa, cedar, magnolia. Also, works well on roots. Blades do break, so safety glasses are advised.

Steve, the old gator
moose
Gold Member
Posts: 209
Joined: Tue Mar 24, 2009 10:25 am

Re: Reciprocating Saws

Post by moose »

Thank you everyone who so thoughtfully responded to my inquiry on this subject. After looking at Lowe's and HD's inventory, I ended up with a $149 Milwaukee. This was more than I intended to spend but for a few bucks more, it got me a longer stroke, orbital action and VS. I felt no need to spend more and enter the professional market. There are some fine saws out there and due to my personal experience with several other Milwaukee power tools, for myself, and with your advice, I feel I have made the correct choice. A battery powered saw would have been nice and as much as battery technology has improved recently, for this application, I don't think battery life would have been adequate.

Thanks again guys.

Moose
User avatar
ChrisNeilan
Platinum Member
Posts: 1463
Joined: Sun Oct 27, 2013 5:30 pm
Location: Waterford, Connecticut
Contact:

Re: Reciprocating Saws

Post by ChrisNeilan »

Good choice
User avatar
rlkeeney
Platinum Member
Posts: 781
Joined: Fri Nov 14, 2008 5:53 am
Location: Tallahassee FL
Contact:

Re: Reciprocating Saws

Post by rlkeeney »

I had a Harbor Freight corded saw that disintegrated while I was using it. As in pieces of metal flying around the back yard. While shopping for a replacement I ran across a posting where some one was using a 20v DeWalt to clear brush. A rave review, I shopped around and found a good price on ebay. I bought the saw two batteries and a charger. I can cut a 6 inch tree down with this thing and cut bush down faster than a second person can drag it off. The really nice thing is that I can cut small trees and brush flush to the ground so there are no stumps to trip over. Expensive but money well spent.

BTW I was going to buy one of the kits but didn't want yet another drill and flashlight. I soon discover that I could get them cheaper buying them individually from eBay.
Post Reply