F
Flintstone
I just find it easier on little wet saw, some times end up with small cuts under units etc to do
I've read with interest and i'm not convinced, I still dont understand why you'd want to do it, you've got a higher risk of injury with grinder kicking back, chips in your eyes, dust in lungs.
Don't get me wrong Ive got two grinders but unless with were huge format tiles i'd just use a wet cutter
I've read with interest and i'm not convinced, I still dont understand why you'd want to do it, you've got a higher risk of injury with grinder kicking back, chips in your eyes, dust in lungs.
Don't get me wrong Ive got two grinders but unless with were huge format tiles i'd just use a wet cutter
Half way through a 15month project and the main contractor tells us we all need kick back stop grinders. We had 20+ tilers on site so obviously a huge cost. We fought it and won because
1. Kick back when cutting 10mm thick tile rarely happens. You're doing something wrong if it does. Safe operating will prevent it.
2. Kick back grinders (at this time) only started at 125mm. So we'd have to go for larger more powerful grinders in order to get the needed safety feature.
We do wear dust masks when operating. Glasses should be worn with wet saw aswell.
A nice dewalt wet cutter would be a nice replacement for a grinder but come at a huge cost for larger companies.
I confirm, at low speed, it becomes warm.I've just bought a Bosch GWS 7-115e and it gets quite hot at slow speeds and doesn't sound the best anyone else have the same problem I don't know if that's what they are like or should I send it back I have the flex variable speed and it's a lot smoother
Find the cheapest price for both professional and DIY wall and floor tiling tools in the UK. Brands such as Rubi, Genesis, Fein, Karl Dahm, isomat, Schluter, Tilemaster and more.