I don't think you ran on at all. The comments you made were interesting and it showed that you had the right idea about which tools were appropriate for certain applications. Deciding this is very important when choosing which tool to buy. You need to look at yourself and the type of cutting you will be doing and make an intelligent decision on your own personal use.
I liked that in Steve's video he also considered this. I also don't do "production work". I am a designer and love to use my saw however, and some days I run it for the entire day. Even my (type 1) DeWalt, which is generally agreed on as a lower grade of saw than the Excalibur gave me over 15 years of good service. I am certain if I was doing the type of cutting that Patch does, it probably would not.
However, with DeWalt's (the company) recent lack of stability and what I have heard from DeWalt owners who recently purchased saws from them, along with my own research, I choose not to get another one when it came time to buy another saw.
I am confident that the Excalibur will be a great saw for me. It already has proven to be much better on so many levels. Ray from Seyco gives impeccable customer service (
And you can tell him I said so if you choose to buy a saw from him!) and I highly recommend him as a source. He answers his own emails and his own phone and I have heard only good about his reputation. He already has been there for my questions and concerns, even though I am up here in Canada.
The Excalibur costs a bit more than the DeWalt, and I am not a wealthy woman. But I would rather pay a little more and invest in a product that I will be able to count on for many years of wonderful service (and backed up by the company that made it) than spend less for a product with a questionable track record.
Just my thoughts.
Sheila