BOSCH GTS15-10 10-Inch Portable Jobsite Table Saw with Gravity-Rise Wheeled Stand, 15 Amp, 32-1/8-Inch Rip Capacity, 4 HP
Category: Table Saws
Choose the DEWALT for faster ripping; choose the smoother option for fine cuts. The DeWalt offers higher no-load speed and mobile rolling-stand benefits. Both Table Saws fit contractors and DIYers working outside.
BOSCH GTS15-10 vs DEWALT DWE7491RS performance comparison
BOSCH GTS15-10 10-Inch Portable Jobsite Table Saw with Gravity-Rise Wheeled Stand favors torque; DEWALT favors RPM. The tested Bosch design holds blade speed under load for consistent finish on hardwood. The DWE7491RS trades top-end torque for higher cutting speed when ripping long boards.
- BOSCH GTS15-10: 15 Amp motor, 4 HP equivalent, 3,800 rpm no-load, 32-1/8 in rip capacity
- DEWALT DWE7491RS: 15 Amp motor, 4 HP equivalent, 4,800 rpm no-load, 32-1/2 in rip capacity
- Both: 10-inch blade diameter standard, single-bevel bevel, rolling or gravity stands available
How do motor power and torque differences affect real-world cuts?
BOSCH GTS15-10 produces steadier speed under load. Steadier speed means the motor resists bogging when feeding dense hardwood like white oak. Higher RPM on the DEWALT gives faster feed rates on softwoods and dimensional lumber. In practice, the Bosch finishes faces with slightly less chatter and the DeWalt completes long crosscuts quicker.
Jobsite portability, setup speed, and stand compatibility
BOSCH table saw includes the GTA50W Gravity-Rise wheeled stand for single-action transport and setup. The GTA50W uses an 8-inch treaded tire set and a foot-release pedal for quick deployment. The DEWALT DWE7491RS ships commonly with a rolling stand that folds and rolls but uses a different latch and footprint.
- BOSCH stand: GTA50W gravity-rise; single-action setup/takedown; 8 in rubber-composite tires; foot release
- DEWALT stand: Rolling site-pro stand; quick-release pins; compact folded footprint for truck storage
How much time does a single-person setup take with a jobsite stand?
GTS15-10 table saw sets up single-handedly in roughly one minute. That single-action sequence reduces time loading saws onto trucks and lowers fatigue across a full workday. The DeWalt stand also sets up quickly, often in one to two minutes for experienced users. For solo contractors, either rig saves setup time compared with looser, two-person stands.
BOSCH GTS15-10 vs DEWALT DWE7491RS ownership costs and durability
BOSCH GTS15-10 offers durable open-frame construction and a guard system designed to lower damage risk on jobsites. The Bosch rack-and-pinion fence with micro-adjustment resists drift and reduces rework on alignment-sensitive panels. The DeWalt fence is fast to square and stable for long rips, which reduces wasted material on large jobs.
- Common wear items both saws share: blades, throat plates, riving knives, anti-kickback pawls, stand tires
- Manufacturer-supplied items: Bosch includes gravity-rise stand; DeWalt often ships with rolling stand model RS
- Service notes: both use direct-drive motors; routine bearing checks and blade-seat cleaning preserve alignment
How often will common parts need replacement with daily jobsite use?
Blade needs replacement every 2-6 weeks with heavy daily ripping of framing lumber. Throat plates and riving knives typically last many months but may need replacement after impacts or gouges. Anti-kickback pawls and fence components wear irregularly and usually require replacement yearly under heavy contractor use. Bearings and stand hardware commonly outlast blades but require periodic inspection and lubrication.
Which saw resells better after heavy use, and why? The DeWalt often retains higher resale value because of brand demand and rolling-stand familiarity among contractors. What blade type works best for each saw and cut? Use a 24-40T ripping blade for fast rip cuts and a 50-80T combo blade for cleaner crosscuts; both saws accept standard 10-inch, 5/8-inch arbor blades. How should I choose between speed and cut quality? Choose the faster RPM model when throughput matters more; choose the steadier-torque model when finish and control on hardwood matter.
