External mitre profiling tool

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Wet would definitely be better on porcelain. No question about it.
I doubt I'd ever have to mitre ceramics but you never know. I agree ceramic is too fragile for the bite of this wheel.
Even dry though, the heat produced was lower than I expected - even at full speed.
 
Bri's post in JOTM March 2013 made me think about this product again (as he mentioned he'd used it on that particular job).

There was a reasonable amount of interest (excitement would be stretching it I think) in this product when I came up with the idea but it seems to have gone flat/quiet lately.

So how are you getting on with this bit of kit? I've not had anyone come back and say "It's carp I want my money back" so that's a good start but there's been little feedback on it.

How's it working out guys? Anyone else interested in one?
 
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Apart from short testing i havent used mine. The job i had hoped to use it on went for a square polished edge in the end.
 
It's a great product Alan, my only complaint would be the time it takes to do a mitre, even with the bulk being taken off with a grinder it probably still takes 10 mins to run down a 600mm length. There are definitely quicker ways of mitring but, it is very accurate time and time again.
 
Accurate but a little slow on porcelain, that's something that's already been mentioned to us.

It appears to be much much faster on natural products, particularly marble and granite.

It's a shame we couldn't get it to work at high speed on a grinder, I guess that was just wishful thinking, but it was just too aggressive.
 
Yeah, those tiles in JOTM were rock hard porcelains, I'm yet to try it out properly on a stone. I'm glad I bought it, it's one of those tools that will only get used a few times a year but, well worth having.
 
I havent had the opportunity to use mine yet either Alan other than playing around with a few spare tiles but it is like most things I have in my tool box it serves a purpose when needed and I think it is well worth the money and will pay for it self time over when the right job comes up so am happy
I tried mitring some porcelain on my dewalt with a worn in blade and the material just pushed the blade off and gave a squinted mitred so your tool is definitely needed and works better than a conventional wet saw in my opinion
 
I havent had the opportunity to use mine yet either Alan other than playing around with a few spare tiles but it is like most things I have in my tool box it serves a purpose when needed and I think it is well worth the money and will pay for it self time over when the right job comes up so am happy
I tried mitring some porcelain on my dewalt with a worn in blade and the material just pushed the blade off and gave a squinted mitred so your tool is definitely needed and works better than a conventional wet saw in my opinion

Couldn't agree more Gary, and with the dewalt, the arm gets in the way on large tiles. It could do with the head tilting 45* the other direction.
 

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