I was in KMS last week when their Magnum 7 X 12 band saw was on sale for $1099. While I was looking at the saws another fellow came along who was thinking of buying the same saw. We got together with the assistant manager and asked for the best deal he would give us for the 2 saws they had left in stock. We both wound up buying one for $950 including a spare Starrett blade. After I got it uncrated I cut a slice off one of the 4" 4140 logs and then a 6.75" log as well. With the blade speed at the second slowest setting, using the factory 8 TPI blade and no coolant the 4" piece took 11 minutes and the 6.75" piece took 34 minutes. I monitored the temperature of the motor and gear box when cutting the big piece and they both got to a peak temperature of 120 degrees F after about 30 minutes. Warm to the touch but not hot. The only thing I don't like about the saw is the wheels, there are no casters so it only wants to roll in a straight line. You have to drag it sideways to turn it. I had the parts on hand to correct this flaw. A couple of years ago I pulled an old automotive floor jack from the scrap bin at work and salvaged some parts from it including the rear mounted casters which were mounted in nice cast iron brackets to the side plates of the jack. I cleaned up the casters and brackets and gave them a fresh coat of paint and mounted them to the sides of the vise end of the saw. I used some 1/4" thick re-enforcing plates on the inside of the saw body and also threaded both ends of the original 5/8" axle from the saw wheels and installed it as a strut to resist the bending forces from casters since they are mounted further outboard than the originals and have no axle connecting them. It rolls around very easily now and I may replace the 2 other plastic wheels with the cast iron ones that came from the floor jack. I'm really happy with how the saw performs, it cut through those big chunks of steel with out breaking a sweat.