Power Tools · Review

LengSuaa W0067 Review

3.9 out of 5 stars· 19 reviews

Intro

A full-size table saw is essential for a professional workshop, but it is massive, expensive, and completely impractical for the kind of small-scale work that happens on a kitchen table, a craft desk, or a tiny balcony workshop. Cutting thin strips of balsa wood for a model aeroplane, trimming plastic parts for a 3D-printed project, or slicing circuit board material to size does not need a 1,500 W cast-iron cabinet saw with a 250 mm blade. What it needs is a compact, portable tool that fits on your desk, runs quietly enough not to disturb the household, and gives you enough precision and control to make clean, accurate cuts in small workpieces. This is where a mini table saw earns its keep. These benchtop-sized tools are purpose-built for hobbyists, model makers, jewellery crafters, and electronics tinkerers — anyone who needs to cut small materials accurately, safely, and without dedicating an entire room to the task.

Generalities

When choosing a mini table saw for craft and hobby use, the key numbers are motor power, blade height, and speed range. A 100 W motor is typical for this class — enough to cut through balsa, basswood, plastic sheet, thin aluminium, and PCB material, but not intended for ripping hardwood or cutting construction lumber. Blade height — the maximum depth of cut above the table — determines the thickest material you can work with; 16 mm covers most craft materials. Variable speed control is valuable because different materials cut best at different RPMs: slower for plastics to avoid melting, faster for soft woods to get a clean edge. The blade material and tooth count matter too: a 24-tooth alloy steel blade is a good general-purpose choice for mixed material cutting. Table size dictates how large a workpiece you can support; a compact 180 × 160 mm table is fine for small parts but limits you to pieces that can be controlled safely. Look for adjustable cutting angles if you need mitre cuts, and consider what accessories are included — a mitre gauge, rip fence, and push stick are essentials for safe and accurate operation. Build quality varies enormously in this category, from precision-machined aluminium hobby tools to basic plastic-bodied units that prioritise affordability over precision.

This review examines a budget-friendly mini table saw with a 100 W motor, seven-speed regulation, and an included accessory set. We assess build quality and table flatness, cutting accuracy on typical hobby materials, ease of use and safety, and whether the value proposition holds up for occasional craft and DIY projects.

Description

This mini table saw is built around a 100 W DC motor running on 24 V, driving a 24-tooth alloy steel circular blade through a seven-level electronic speed controller. The blade speed ranges from 0 to 6,000 RPM, adjusted via a rotary dial on the body. Maximum blade protrusion above the table surface is 16 mm, which sets the practical cutting depth for materials. The table measures 180 × 160 mm, and the overall body dimensions are 18 × 16 × 10 cm — compact enough to store on a shelf and light enough to carry with one hand. The frame is a mix of plastic and metal components, with a silver and black finish.

The saw is designed as a general-purpose hobby cutting station. The table surface is flat with a machined slot for the mitre gauge, allowing straight and angled cross-cuts. A rip fence is included for cutting parallel strips and making repeat-width cuts — essential for model making where you need multiple identical strips of wood or plastic. The blade guard provides some protection, though as with all mini saws of this type, safe operation depends primarily on the user's technique: keep fingers well clear of the blade, use the push stick for narrow pieces, and never force material through faster than the motor can handle. The blade height of 16 mm means it handles material up to roughly 10–12 mm thick comfortably — balsa sheets, plywood, acrylic, PCB blanks, and thin aluminium bar stock are all within its capability.

The seven-level speed control is the standout feature at this price point. Different materials respond to different cutting speeds: run the blade slowly at levels 1–2 when cutting acrylic and plastics to prevent the material from melting and welding itself back together behind the cut. Use levels 3–5 for soft woods like balsa and basswood, where a moderate speed gives a clean cut without tearing the grain. Levels 6–7 work for thin plywood and aluminium, where higher speed reduces the chance of the blade catching and kicking the workpiece. The electronic speed controller maintains reasonable torque across the range, though at the lowest speeds the 100 W motor can stall if you feed material too aggressively — patience and light pressure are key. The saw runs on mains power via a 24 V adapter, making it suitable for indoor use without battery anxiety.

The accessory package is generous for the price. Along with the saw itself, you get a mitre gauge for angled cross-cuts, a rip fence for parallel cuts, a push stick for safety, spare blades, and various adjustment tools. The accessories are functional rather than precision-engineered — the mitre gauge has some play in the table slot, and the rip fence benefits from being checked with a square before relying on the scale markings. This is typical for budget mini saws and is workable for hobby use where tolerances of half a millimetre are acceptable. For critical precision work, upgrading to an aftermarket mitre gauge or fabricating a custom sled from plywood and aluminium angle would tighten up accuracy considerably. The blade is replaceable, and standard 24-tooth blades for mini saws are widely available online.

The saw measures 18 × 16 × 10 cm and weighs approximately 2 to 3 kg — light enough to move between a cupboard and a desk, heavy enough to stay put during use. Customer ratings sit at 3.9 out of 5 stars from 19 reviews on Amazon.fr, and it ranks #108 in the Table Saws category. At around €87, it is firmly in the budget segment — less than a third of the price of a premium-brand mini table saw like the Proxxon FET. For occasional hobby cutting of small wood, plastic, and soft metal pieces, it offers a functional and affordable entry point into table saw use. Model makers, jewellery crafters, PCB builders, and DIY enthusiasts who need straight, repeatable cuts in small materials will find it a useful addition to their toolkit.

Pros and cons

Pros

  • Seven-level variable speed from 0 to 6,000 RPM gives genuine material control — slow for plastics to avoid melting, fast for soft woods and thin metal.
  • Compact 18 × 16 × 10 cm footprint fits on a craft desk or small workbench — takes up about as much space as a shoebox and stores away easily when not in use.
  • Comprehensive accessory package includes mitre gauge, rip fence, push stick, spare blades, and adjustment tools — everything needed to start cutting out of the box.
  • 24-tooth alloy steel blade handles mixed materials — balsa, basswood, plywood, acrylic sheet, PCB blanks, and thin aluminium — without needing to swap blades between materials.
  • 100 W motor is adequate for its intended hobby-grade materials — cuts steadily through craft woods and plastics without bogging down, as long as feed pressure is kept light.
  • Affordable entry point at around €87 — roughly a third the cost of premium-brand mini table saws, making hobby table saw use accessible to casual crafters.

Cons

  • Only 19 customer reviews limit confidence in long-term reliability — early feedback averages 3.9 stars, suggesting generally satisfied users but with some quality variation between units.
  • Generic Chinese brand with no established warranty or service network in Europe — spare parts availability and customer support are uncertain compared to brands like Proxxon or Dremel.
  • 16 mm blade height limits material thickness to approximately 12 mm in practice — cannot handle standard 18 mm plywood or 20 mm timber boards common in household DIY.
  • Plastic-bodied construction and basic accessory tolerances mean the saw is functional rather than precision-engineered — expect to check the fence and mitre gauge with a square before trusting the built-in scales.
  • 100 W motor will stall if you feed material too aggressively — requires patience and light pressure, which can be frustrating for users accustomed to the power of full-size tools.

Use cases

This mini table saw is best suited for model makers, craft hobbyists, electronics tinkerers, and DIY enthusiasts who need occasional straight cuts in thin wood, plastic, and soft metal — not for construction or heavy workshop use.

Model Aircraft and Balsa Wood Crafting

Cutting strips of balsa and basswood for model aeroplane frames, ship hull ribs, and architectural models is the core use case. The variable speed prevents tear-out on fragile end grain, and the rip fence ensures consistent-width stringers and longerons. The compact table supports small parts safely without needing a full workshop setup.

PCB Cutting and Electronics Prototyping

Trimming copper-clad FR4 circuit board blanks to size for custom electronics projects produces hazardous fibreglass dust — doing it on a dedicated mini saw with dust control is safer than using a hacksaw or rotary tool. The low speed settings prevent the blade from chipping the brittle board edges.

Acrylic and Plastic Sheet Fabrication

Cutting acrylic, polycarbonate, and styrene sheet for display cases, project enclosures, and craft projects benefits from the slower speed settings — they prevent the material from melting and welding back together behind the cut, a common frustration when using high-speed rotary tools on plastic.

Dollhouse and Miniature Furniture Making

Producing tiny furniture components, miniature flooring planks, and scale architectural details requires many identical small cuts. The rip fence gives repeatable strip widths, and the compact table suits the scale of the work — a full-size table saw would be absurdly oversized for cutting 3 mm wide dollhouse floorboards.

Jewellery and Small Metalworking Projects

Cutting thin brass, copper, and aluminium sheet and bar stock for jewellery findings and small metal projects is within the saw's capability with the right blade. The higher speed settings give clean edges on non-ferrous metals, and the precision is adequate for pieces that will be filed and finished after cutting.