the high speed metal cutting saws, like the evolution, or the jepson, are just not industrial tools.
because high speed blades have a relatively short life cutting steel, and their only real advantage over a true low speed cold saw is cost.
They will be more expensive in a production environment, and wear out quickly.
which is why nobody makes a good
one.
The Jepson, for example, is a lightweight, low powered, cheap saw for cutting thin gaga sheet metal studs for drywallers. it weighs 42lbs...
It nominally has a 70mm capacity, but you try and cut a piece of 70mm (2 3/4" diameter) solid round bar on that saw, ONCE, much less all day, and see how you like it.
I have been on jobsites where people use those evolutions. they are handy, quick, and disposable tools.
They work ok, but are no comparison to real saws.
I have been running my 600lb Haberle in semi-production since 1992, and I bought it used.
I dont believe that the 200 dollar evolution will still be running after a year or two of real daily shop or jobsite use.
There just is no magic bullet.
You can put one of those high speed blades on a wood cutting miter saw. You will go thru several blades a year, and a new saw every couple years, if you are actually using it for production cutting of steel.
Sometimes thats the most appropriate way to go- buy cheap and use em up. I have known carpenters who have a favorite brand of sub-$500 small jobsite tablesaws, and they just keep buying more of em, knowing they will self destruct after a year or two of jobsite use.
I guess if you treat this saw like a consumable, and just factor that in, you could get away with using a $500 miter saw.