Tools that used to be great

   / Tools that used to be great #31  
   / Tools that used to be great #32  
Pardon the stupid question, but is that a left handed saw? Every circular saw I've ever owned had the blade on the right side.

That’s a right handed saw. All the saws with the blade on the right are wrong for a right handed person. I hadn’t even noticed the difference until I not noticing bought a left blade saw. I never was very good with a skil saw until that. It’s night and day difference using a saw with the blade to the center of your body like it should be.
 
   / Tools that used to be great #33  
Remember, the cord size is very important also. When purchasing an extension cord, wire size is most important. A 12 guage wire size usually is good for most applications. Bob

A house outlet that’s wired with 14 gauge doesn’t do a saw any favors either. On more than one occasion on a job I’ve had to run a cord through a kitchen window and plug into a kitchen outlet that’s 12 gauge for my saws because the 14 gauge outside outlet won’t do the job. I’ve got a few 10 gauge extension cords and most of mine are 12 gauge. I try to get by with a 25 foot cord if I can. A 14 gauge or less cord doesn’t have any business running air compressors or saws.
 
   / Tools that used to be great #34  
FWIW...Porter Cable makes the same model 71/4" saw in both orientations...
For making some miter cuts (L-R) you really need both...!
 
   / Tools that used to be great #35  
No. All of the saws with the blades on the right side are backward.... I hate those saws with the blade not visible to a right handed person. I have a Skil 5 1/2" saw because it has the blade on the left as do the larger worm drives. The 5 1/2" works well for 2x4 rafter tails when you are hanging over the side of the roof. :)

I think we have the same 5 1/2" Skilsaw. HD5510. Mine is about 30 years old. Lightweight and pretty powerful. I used it for a long time until the small cordless saws came in. For decades it was the only left side blade sidewinder saw on the market.
 

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   / Tools that used to be great #36  
I think we have the same 5 1/2" Skilsaw. HD5510. Mine is about 30 years old. Lightweight and pretty powerful. I used it for a long time until the small cordless saws came in. For decades it was the only left side blade sidewinder saw on the market.

I had one and liked it so much I bought another in a thrift store for a spare, but gave one to my son. Not many 5 1/2 inch blades available with 1/2 inch arbor.

Bruce
 
   / Tools that used to be great #37  
I had one and liked it so much I bought another in a thrift store for a spare, but gave one to my son. Not many 5 1/2 inch blades available with 1/2 inch arbor.

Bruce

I did the exact same thing Bruce. I had one for 25 years and then I saw someone in Olympia a couple months ago had one for sale that was barely even used. Included a bag to keep it in. It was like new. I gave my old one to one of my sons. I have a Porter Cable 6" with the blade on the left but the little skil does what I need at probably 60% of the weight.
 
   / Tools that used to be great #38  
FWIW...Porter Cable makes the same model 71/4" saw in both orientations...
For making some miter cuts (L-R) you really need both...!

Yep. I ran into that issue making miters on the finish stringer board for my stairs when I finished them off last year. My regular circ saw tips one way and my cordless one tips the other way, so that worked out OK. I needed both to do all the cuts.
 
   / Tools that used to be great #39  
I had a worm drive Skilsaw(6.5") that must have weighed 25 pounds. Most miserable saw I've ever owned. It wouldn't even run if the outside temps were below freezing. My other Skilsaws were great and still are after 40 years.
 
   / Tools that used to be great #40  
I had a worm drive Skilsaw(6.5") that must have weighed 25 pounds. Most miserable saw I've ever owned. It wouldn't even run if the outside temps were below freezing. My other Skilsaws were great and still are after 40 years.
I know, my old screw drive must be close to 35 years old. Heavy mother to say the least. The oil you fill them with has alot to do with the cold weather ability. I wonder if old oil becomes thicker when cold, or maybe moisture builds up that can freeze?. Ive used mine in miserable weather, and its definitely slower for first 10-15 minutes until it warms up.
 

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