Hi Judith,Judith Andre wrote:Disappointing that the dichro chips so badly with this saw. I was looking at it online today. Other than that , do you like it? Is it worth the money? Anybody else have one? I bought the original Taurus ring saw and it was junk. Little plastic parts that wore out FAST. Blades that broke no matter how slow I went . So I'm a little leery of Gemini products.
Have started a new topic, because I think you will get more replies to your question this way.
For me, the reply to your query is a bit difficult. It took me years to decide if I really wanted the Taurus 3, because of its quality issues. Got it in the end, and use it very little. Now i got the XT, not because I think the construction is much better, but because I need to cut curves on lots of 6mm glass (1/4"), and find the T3 excruciatingly slow with the fine blades. Have not bought the faster blades because all my work is with dichro, too much waste.
My personal thought about Gemini products is that the idea is good, the construction and quality are not. Within my possibilities, I like to invest in professional equipment, even if I have to wait a bit longer to pay for the extra quality.
With Gemini products, I am very clear that I am paying a lot more than I should, because I am only getting "hobby" quality. Can't say "I feel cheated", because I know this before I buy.
But it is the only saw that does the work. I need to do the cuts the XT does once in a while to expand my range of work. Unfortunately there are no other saws out there for this.
From my experience, can't imagine it would be great for precise straight cuts. I know people use it for this also, so others might chip in with their thoughts. Have a very good tile saw with a 10" thin blade and stabilizers. If I didn't, I would save for it, instead of buying the sliding tray for the XT.
Problems encountered already: there is a metal piece that sits on top of the blade (it is suppose to hold the top wheel up and tension it so the blade does not rattle). We had to increase the curve by bending it a couple of times, until it would sit properly without touching the blade. Fortunately my husband has strong hands, I couldn't do it by myself.
Tiny bits of glass drop into the wheel/belt assembly below the blade. In future we are going to remove the plastic cover and direct a stream of water directly onto the wheels and belt, so the glass bits are washed away.
One instructor that sells lots of these XT says "no chipping, absolutely no chipping". Well, I would not fuse the glass pieces until I have smoothed the edges with my 600 grinder, there is sufficient chipping there, at least for me.
Regarding the dichro, I still have to try a tip learned from tilers, this is similar to Mike Jordan's advice. I'll cover the surface with clear packing tape and cut through that.
Will take a while till I need to use the saw again, will report when done. As with every saw, there is a lot of cleaning and drying before it can be stored away, so it is better to have a pile of work to get through in one sitting.
Here is a link to a tiler's forum. I think the information might be a couple of years old, but still relevant. There is a lady in the forum that has some very bad complaints about the XT. I'd suggest to read through all the threads to get a balanced view.
http://www.johnbridge.com/vbulletin/sho ... hp?t=75966
Link to another tiler's forum http://www.contractortalk.com/f73/anyon ... saw-65334/
I bought the XT before reading these reviews. And, yes, would have bought it anyway after reading them. As many of the tilers comment, you just have to accept it if you need to get the work done.
You will find also comments about Diamond saws. I vaguely considered if they would be an alternative. "Vaguely" because they also have some quality issues.
In the tiler's forum there is also a mention of a German made band saw, Karl Dahm. They have a demo video...and prices are in Euros

Here in Australia I would have to pay 15% import duty plus 10% GST...and haven't found any reviews to justify to start dreaming about it.
It is always interesting that mileage varies for every user, with every tool. It seems to me that the answer to "do you like it" or "is it good" is seldom simple.
So, don't know if all the above is any help at all

Best wishes, seachange