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|  | Home   Bosch TS2000 Gravity-Rise Wheeled Table Saw Stand | |
|  | |  | | | Bosch TS2000 Gravity-Rise Wheeled Table Saw Stand | | | | | SKU:
BOSTS2000 | | In Stock | | Availability:
Usually ships in 1 business days | | | | | | Includes Gravity-Rise Wheeled Table Saw Stand - TS2000 | | | |
List Price:
| $391.00 | |
Our Price:
| $199.00
& this item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping.
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You Save:
| $192.00 (49%)
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| | Product Details | | Product Length: | 43.0 inches | | Product Width: | 29.0 inches | | Product Height: | 24.5 inches | | Product Weight: | 0.0 pounds | | Package Length: | 41.0 inches | | Package Width: | 26.0 inches | | Package Height: | 14.1 inches | | Package Weight: | 66.0 pounds | | Average Customer Rating: | based on 89 reviews |
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| | Features | Gravity-rise wheeled table saw stand with universal mounting slots8 treaded pneumatic wheels for tough terrainHeavy gauge 1-1/2-inch steel tubing supports more than 250-pounds of forceIncludes stand, tires, and universal mounting slots24-1/2-inches tall; 66 pounds; 1-year warranty
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| | Customer Reviews | Average Customer Review: ( 89 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
40 of 40 found the following review helpful:
good solid stand Jan 08, 2005
By K. R. mcmahon
"Honey-Do Man"
just received this stand around december 22. it does have to be put together, which takes about 30 minutes unless you do it backwards like i did, then it takes a little longer. have transported the saw to a job site and it folds up nice and sets up quickly. it has a great work height and is stable. it does make the saw heavier but is easy to load and unload. if you have a bosch table saw this would be an added benefit. especially if you need to wheel saw around to job site to job site. the wheels are very good. I had the rousseau stand but was not satisfied (the rolling one) this works much better.
29 of 29 found the following review helpful:
Well built, well engineered Jul 01, 2005
By Jason Ledyard
"jdl75"
I didn't think any saw stand would be as good as my Rigid M-SUV mitre saw stand. Oh how wrong I was!
This is a very solid, very well built and very well engineered jobsaw stand. It is durable enough to take the beatings of being dragged out of my truck, bounced across a job site, up and down a set of stairs, or anything else you would want to do to it.
I have the DeWalt DW-744 mounted to mine, and all the holes are pre-drilled and markings are STAMPED into the top plate! This really is a universal stand.
To me, the single item that really stands out is there is not a single hydraulic strut on this stand, and yet it requires very little effort to get the saw into the working position. No strut means nothing to leak or wear out! No seals to replace. Everything is accomplished with old-fashioned leverage, and it works wonderfully.
The pneumatic tires are also a big plus in my book. Solid tires just won't take the weight and punishment that pneumatic tires will. My only gripe is I'd like the tires to be about 2 inches larger in diameter. But with the design of the stand, it's not a big deal, as I think I can retrofit something larger on my own.
44 of 48 found the following review helpful:
Warning on Portability Jun 15, 2006
By Martin Winters YOU CANNOT GET THE SAW THROUGH A 30" DOOR WHEN MOUNTED ON THE STAND. Everything else is great. So what? I can't move it to the basement, from the garage into the house, into my storage room. The width is 29" at the wheels. Sounds good - if any of my doors opened 180 degrees and didn't have stop molding. In practice 27.5" should have been the design width they worked within. That should not have been difficult given the saw width is 25".
And don't think you can just turn it side ways and slide it through. With the stand and blade guard installed (both require tools to remove), the profile is more than 29". You can wiggle it through but I doubt the plastic blade guard will survive too many attempts. The whole assembly is also very heavy and awkward when trying this.
Don't underestimate how important this is. Only my front door is greater than 30 inches. Every other door is 30".
23 of 23 found the following review helpful:
You Want This -- You REALLY, REALLY Want This! May 14, 2006
By Henry Perkins The Bosch 4000 is the best of the "benchtop" (i.e., portable) table saws. With my table saw "living" in my storage shed and carried to my patio work area each time I need it, portability is a must. I got the Bosch 4000-07, the model with the red folding base, a couple of years ago. It worked fine, but each time I needed the saw I had to pick it up off the base and carry it across the lawn to the patio, set it down and make another trip for the base, and finally pick up the saw and put it back on the base. I never bolted the saw down to the base because the combination is both heavy and bulky, a package too unwieldy for me to haul across the lawn in one piece. And with uneven ground, a standard movable (castered) base wouldn't help.
Then last year Bosch came out with this item, the "TS2000 Gravity-Rise Wheeled Table Saw Stand with Universal Mounting Slots". A big name, and even bigger performance. Even though this base cost more than my first "starter" table saw, I'm really happy with the purchase.
The package as delivered was both big (42" high) and heavy (66 lbs.), so I was glad I had another wheeled cart (a hand truck) to move this to my back patio for assembly. When I opened it up I found the manual to be better than usual. The diagrams of the major pieces are pretty good (except the "lower cross bar" picture looks distorted), and the diagrams of the fasteners are EXCELLENT. They're done to scale so you can lay the parts on the page for a "no doubt about it" match. The fasteners come in two bags; the larger bag is used to assemble the base, and the smaller bag to mount the table saw on the base.
Each assembly step includes a closeup showing where the fasteners go. With just a closeup each time, I found myself scratching my head a couple of times to locate which sections of the larger pieces were depicted. But I had no other problems with the instructions for assembling the base, and only one problem in mounting the table saw to it. (The mounting instructions say to insert and securely tighten the first bolt, then repeat for the other three holes. I tried it that way, but the other holes were out of alignment by a hair. Instead you should *loosely* tighten the bolts until all four are in, and only then secure them.) I only tried to mount my Bosch table saw, of course, but there are instructions included for Dewalt DW744, Craftsman 21830, Makita 2703, Hitachi C10RA2, and Ridgid TS2400LS table saws as well.
The tools I used were:
- utility knife, to open the packaging
- rubber mallet, to persuade the upper & lower cross bars to snug together
- large Phillips screwdriver
- 17 mm, 13 mm, and 10 mm ratcheting wrenches
- 8" crescent wrench
Total assembly time was just over 1-1/2 hours, including time spent looking for tools.
In operation, the Gravity-Rise stand is just wonderful. The big pneumatic tires take the trip across my uneven lawn without any problems, even though the combination of saw and base is most of my weight. The superb balance -- upright for moving, lowered for operation, and in between -- is responsible for this ease of operation. I tighten down the Bench Dog featherboard and it's good to go. The standard Bosch miter gauge *almost* stays locked in its storage slots on the left side of the saw, and works OK if I watch it. The Bosch dust collector bag will stay attached while moving, but the end drags on the ground so I remove it while wheeling the saw about.
Using my table saw with the new stand is both faster and easier on my back. As an added bonus, in the upright position the saw now has a smaller footprint in my storage shed than with the original red folding base.
You *really*, *really* want this if you've got a benchtop saw that you move around.
11 of 11 found the following review helpful:
Made my great saw, even greater Jul 08, 2005
By Diesel Soot Todd The stand that came with my Bosch 4000 was sturdy, but cumbersome to move. I do most of my work out of a small one car garage, and to try to keep it clean, I'd move the saw outside. This meant lifting the entire saw and stand, or dragging it.
I just got the new folding stand (ts-2000) and I absolutely love it. Folds and sets up easily, moves effortlessly and saves a decent amount of floorspace when it's folded and not being used.
My only gripe is that it wasn't part of the package deal when I bought my saw 2 years ago!
See all 89 customer reviews on Amazon.com
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