I have the PCS with the 1 3/4 hp motor and 36 inch fence. My shop is small and I find it much easier to make cuts on bigger pieces, sheet goods or solid lumber, with a track saw. I was a little disappointed with the smaller motor's ability to make 2+ inch rips with full kerf blades. So I switched to thin kerf and all is good. I can rip or crosscut to the full 3 inch capacity of the saw at about normal feed rate. At least that is my experience so far. I do not make cuts this deep very often but I have done it successfully. I have and like the Colliflower throat plate insert. The mdf sacrificial pieces are a bit flimsy but the main body is sturdy aluminum. I make my own inserts of plywood and solid wood. The opening in the aluminum is big enough you could use it with a dado blade set. I put my PCS on a home made mobile base to raise it up to my preferred 38 inch height. I also built in a storage cabinet under the extension wing.
I used to have a router table setup in the extension wing of a different table saw but I did not like that setup. It seemed like I was always needing to use the saw making the router setup in the way - or vice versa. I have and prefer a separate router table. I did occasionally find the table saw setup useful when I wanted two router table setups ready to go. In my current shop, the area the router table would be in is pretty congested so I haven't set up anything. If you think you want to do this, all you have to do is screw a spare fixed router base under the extension table and poke a hole for the bit to come through. I am not a fan of purchasing router tables. I have not even purchased a router plate. I have always just built my router tables. My current router table has screw adjustment of height (home made), a big PC 7518 motor, and a tilt up top for changing bits. I used it earlier today to cut some dados for some drawer fronts and cabinet doors I'm making. Works consistently great.
I am in my mid 60s and have been making sawdust for about 50 years. I have never owned a 220V table saw and I am sure I never will. I am not saying that they are a bad thing. I am saying that I can make anything I or my kids need with a 110V saw. I like Woodsmiths cherry bedroom set, for instance, that uses legs for the headboard and footboard that are about 2 3/4 thick glueups. Mine and my daughters is cherry, my son's is oak. I ripped those legs out easily with a 110V saw. You need a clean and sharp ripping blade but a 110V saw will do this kind of work. If I had a 3hp saw I might not need to change to a ripping blade. That would be nice but not worth the rewiring and added cost of the saw to me.