Discuss Hello! Which wet saw...? in the British & UK Tiling Forum area at TilersForums.com.

J

jimdoe

Hi

This is my first post.

I'm setting up a property services business (plumbing and tiling mainly).

I'm looking for a portable wet saw that will do the business (quality clean cuts). I've been looking long and hard on the web and the prices range from £150ish to £2000ish! They all say they do the job so I'm a bit stuck.

The DeWalt D24000 looks quality - but at £684.25inc VAT its a bit pricy...

Any help would be appreciated.

Cheers

Jim
:8:
 
J

jimdoe

OK Guys - to get me going in the world of pro tiling I have bought (as well as all the standard kit/tools of course):

RUBI ND-180-BL 230v with Carry Case & extra blade (can you recommend replacment blades for the future...?)
RUBI TS50 PLUS Tile Cutter (free maint. kit)
RUBI Clean Washboy
Porsadrill Kit Max

I think this kit should cover most standard ceramic tiling - not much left in my budget anyway! Oh, questions if you don't mind;


1. What does a tiler need hosepipe for...? My best guess is to draw curves on tiles!!
2. Baton stands - yay or nay?
3. Bath Boards - seems like a brill idea - yay or nay? Make my own?
4. Do you really need latex gloves for using black grout - can't you just wash it off your hands after?
5. Whats the difference between a 'Tilers Sponge' and a Jumbo Sponge from the supermarket (apart from about 2 quid)?


Oh and cheers for replying to my first post chaps!

Jim:8:
 
D

diamondtiling

Hi Jimdoe
welcome, I have a hosepipe on my van for doing mixes, its a bit slow using a watering can and the water will warm up on a hot day and ruin your mix, its not used for drawing curves, grout sponges are different from jumbo types because they tend to be natural sponge, mine are anyway, if you have a washboy then chances are you will have sponges with handles for speed and efficency. I use a sigma wet cutter, if you are going to buy one then get 110volt, they last longer and can be used on site, even if you will not be doing site work they are safer than 240v. Goodluck with your new venture.

:thumbsup:
 
D

diamondtiling

sorry missed a bit, black grout ruins your sponges so if I use it then I charge for replacements, I always use Latex gloves for all grouting otherwise your hands will be as dry as Gandi's flipflop, Baton stands need to be buried in a large hole and forgotten about, I use a glue gun to stick a batton but only if the tiles are too heavy, otherwise I dont use battons.

:thumbsup:
 
G

Gazzer

Hi

This is my first post.

I'm setting up a property services business (plumbing and tiling mainly).

I'm looking for a portable wet saw that will do the business (quality clean cuts). I've been looking long and hard on the web and the prices range from £150ish to £2000ish! They all say they do the job so I'm a bit stuck.

The DeWalt D24000 looks quality - but at £684.25inc VAT its a bit pricy...

Any help would be appreciated.

Cheers

Jim
:8:

£2000 ?? :yikes:
Quality comes at a price and it would do everything and more you needed.
 
J

jimbob

Woke up this morning and thought, how am I going to do cut outs...? i.e for wall sockets?
I have the RUBI TS50 PLUS Tile Cutter - just arrived, much exitement!
And my RUBI ND-180-BL 230v should be here by lunchtime but I will obviously need at some point to cut half/whole rectangles out of a tile...:huh2:

Never used the Rubi ND-180-BL but assuming the guard for the blade can be removed, whole rectangles can be cut by plunging the tile down onto the blade from above, so it comes up and cuts along your desired line for each side of the rectangle.

For half rectangles, I would score the inside line of the rectangle with your dry cutter first, then use wet saw to cut out the two perpendicular lines from the side of the tile, then snap off along the scored line.

Hope this makes sense..:thumbsup:
 
L

Lawrence147

I have the Rubi ND 180 Bl and can't fault it.:thumbsup::thumbsup: The blade guard can be removed for plunge cuts - just loosen the two screws towards the back of the machine. But make sure these screws don't rust or they become a pig to get loose, and if they do Ikea Wardrobe bolts fit in almost perfectly!!:thumbsup:

Just need a good blade on it and you'll be sorted Jim

Lawrence
 
B

brian c

marcrist pro diamond tile cutting disc for future around £33 each.

dont use baton stands personally.

Latex goves are a must with black grout and mask all woodwork.

Bathboards are available from TRADETILER our forums sponsor.

Bal or Ardex sponges are my choice (more expensive but far superior)

remember your safety goggles :thumbsup:
 

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