We've been running these for a while now, and the 4KW main motor handles teh 3200mm cuts without bogging down, even on thick MDF—the scoring blade really does keep chipping to a minimum, which is pretty much essential if you're doing finished panels.
Most buyers in furniture manufacturing go with the 1250mm width, as it handles standard sheet goods in one pass without needing to flip the materail, and the 80mm height means you can stack thinner pieces if you're careful.

It's typically about 600kg, so you'll want a solid floor or reinforcement if you're on an upper level, and the sliding table size is 3200×375mm, which gives you decent support for long rips without being overly bulky.

Voltage options are 110V, 220V, 380V, or 415V, but we usually stock the 220V and 380V versions in most cases; the 0-45° angle range is adjustable, and while it's not the fastest setup for miters, it works fine for.

The main saw blade diameter runs form 250mm to 350mm, and the speed is 4500-6000 RPM, so you'll need to match blade to material—solid wood at the lower end, particleboard at higher, basically. Anyway, CE and ISO9001 are covered, and there's a 1-year warranty that covers manufacturing defects but not wear items like the saw blade or scoring blade.
Lead time is roughly 20 days or so for standdard orders, and we do offer customiztion on the scoring motor or table extensions if you need it, but confirm before ordering because of that it can push delivery out by a week or two.
We can do a single unit as a trial order, but for bulk pricing we typically recommend at least 5 units per shipment.
Standard production takes about 15-20 working days. Custom voltage orders might add 5-7 days depending on the configuration.
Yes, every machine ships with both CE and ISO9001 certificates included in the packing—no extra fees.
Absolutely—the 4KW motor paired with a 300-350mm blade cuts through 80mm solid wood cleanly, just make sure the blade is sharp and feed rate is steady.
We wrap it in stretch film and secure it on a plywood pallet with steel strapping. For sea freight, we recommend an optional wooden crate to prevent moisture damage.