Bosch JA1010 Jig Saw Guide for Circular and Parallel Cutting

Bosch JA1010 Jig Saw Guide for Circular and Parallel Cutting

Key features

  • Jig saw guide
  • Mount brackets with screws (2 sets)
  • Pivot pin for circle cutting
  • 1-Year Warranty
BrandBOSCH
ColorBlack

Bosch JA1010 Jig Saw Guide for Circular and Parallel Cutting

List Price: $48.87$43.98DEALYou Save: $4.89 (10%)
Free shippingFree Returns – 30 daysFree Order CancellationSecure Payment2–3 Days DeliveryGet It June 23, 2026In Stock (6)No marketing spamNo account requiredFulfilment by FedEx / Amazon / UPS / ShipwirePayPal / Card Buyer Protection

Customer Reviews

Reviews sourced from verified Amazon purchasers
3.6
out of 5
Based on 10 reviews
5
20%
4
0%
3
40%
2
10%
1
30%
It's unique but works
Linda LeeJuly 29, 2017
Works like it stated but overly complicated way of connecting to the saw.
Don't waste your money like I did!
Jason ShayMay 4, 2017
Tried to cut a 6" hole for cornhole boards. No matter what I did, the guide would not maintain 6". Total waste of money!
Bad.
Anonymous VelociraptorNovember 28, 2016
Wow - Bosch couldn't have made this more flimsy. Flexes easily and reeks of cost cutting in its build. Could only get it to work under perfect conditions. Might as well use a clamped straightedge.
Can't cut a good circle
Dan MatthewsMay 23, 2015
Purchased this for my Bosch JS365 jigsaw to cut 6" diameter holes for a cornhole game set. This guide could not cut an accurate circle no matter which setting I used. I used the wedges as suggested and as the cut progressed, the diameter increased resulting in an oval type cut. Ruined 2 pieces of wood in the process. Returned it and bought a 6" hole saw which worked. Did not try the edge guide but I would not recommend this to anyone wanting to cut circles
Some limitations, but worth having
Art VandalayAugust 1, 2014
I have used it once, and it does the basic job of guiding the saw. Works better for larger pieces of wood (say two inches wider than the jig). When cutting a thin strips off the edge of a smaller piece, the protruding steel ruler ran into my clamp and I had to come up with a more creative way to secure the piece.

I also I struggled with getting a precise setup. When you tighten the thumbscrews, it seemed to move a 1/16" or so. To combat splintering, I scribed the cut line with a sharp blade, then used the edge guide to keep me on the scribed line (not centered on the scribe but with one edge of the blade on the scribe and the remainder in the "waste" side of the cut).
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