Discuss Angle Grinders in the UK Tiling Forum area at TilersForums.com.

A

alib103

Been reading a lot of posts recently with guys recommending angle grinders. I've had my eyes on the one in CTD and just wondered if it had many uses. I'm used to cutting porcelain with my wet cutter and nibbling out the rest which takes a little while but i can get a decent result. Are the angle grinders easy to use, do they do a good job? What else can i use them for? The CTD one looks a bargain so i might snap one up.
 
F

frogeye

...... I use grinder a lot especially for travi and slate much quicker than wet


I found the exact opposite. Most of the slate I was using was too thick for my little plasplugs (one down from the expensive(ish) one) I was using Cutting with the angle grinder was real pain and very dusty - out comes the respirator - but when I started using the slightly thinner stuff and the wet cutter was bought into use - joy of joys - rapid clean cuts - apart from the 6" streak up my tee shirt front.

Mind you I was only using stone cutters supplied so I will accept the points about a proper blade being important.


frogeye
 
C

cp3147

splash out and get a cordless grinder, i had a hitachi cordless grinder untill some tea leaf lifted it a couple of week ago! worth its weight in gold, comfortable & easy to use, i replaced it with the dewalt one but im not kean, its not as comfy to use and its not got a li-ion battery so dosnt last aslong. iI still have a 110v grinder tho for porcelain n a wetcutter but thats covered in dust in the garage, and i agree with dave dont buy budget blades get the marcarist one www.Tradetiler.com sell them at fair prices, On that has anybody tried the rubi grinder wheels??
 
R

rob

Angle grinder is all I use now. used to use a wet saw, but find that a good quality angle grinder and blade makes a faster and neater job. I even cut pipe holes out with mine, and do all my tile mitres with it. No need for water, or bulky wet cutter and does a great job. Just takes a while to get used to using it. Saves having to use nippers a lot as well. It is one of me best tools. I got a good quality Makita one :thumbsup:
 
D

Dave Ramsden

I recently bouth a 115mm bosch grinder to replace my makita, I find it lags a bit under load. Back to makita for me next time.
Ive been using Marcrist blades for over 6 years now and have never had any problems with them at all.

Grinders are excellent tools for awkward cuts and once youve been using one for a while there wont be any more impossible cuts :D
 
D

Deleted member 1779

As I've mentioned in other angle griner posts:

1) They kick like mules so be very careful when starting off.
2) A wetsaw gives you back both hands to hold the tile. Angle grinders take up a hand !
3) Always wear goggles (not glasses) because they spit fire, dust, sparks and tile.
4) They cant really be used wet so can cause a lot of dust. Use outside if poss

But they do have a use and I use them on my shop displays when carving out tiles.

Go for a small grinder (110mm) not a big paving slab cutter (230mm) and try and put in a quality diamond blade. Then sit back, hang on for the ride - and watch out for your vitals !

Dsc09500.jpg


Above is my little grinder

Safety_Goggles.jpg


Always wear goggles. Your eyes are important!
 
Last edited by a moderator:
R

rob

Yep I agree about the dust, that is one problem with them. Also, buy a small one so that it is easy to opertae with the one hand.

Try This Method: If you want to cut a straight line perfectly, rule your line first and then put some masking tape along the line. This gives you a straight line to follow (dust wont keep covering up your pen line) and it will also stop the edge from chipping.

Works perfect for me, and great when you only need to take a couple of mm's off.

Try it out :thumbsup:
 
F

frogeye

I found the best way for me to maintain a straight line (realised I needed a sure fire method after the first attempt) was to use a piece of lath along the line. Tried one with it clamped to the slate and all the others using my foot on one end of the lath and the clamp on the other end working off a piece of plywood - don't worry I was miles away from slicing my toes off. It worked a treat - the pressure from the lath kept the tile rock solid while I ran the cutter down the side. Once a few stokes had been done the cutter was easy to control in the channel cut in the tile.

Worked for me but each to their own - still dusty though

frogeye
 

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