Discuss tough porcelaine in the British & UK Tiling Forum area at TilersForums.com.

S

sWe

A tip if you've got trouble doing thin strips of porcelain, is to divide the tile so that the piece you want is 50% of the tile instead of, say, 20%. Makes it alot easier on really tough tiles.

If you're on the other hand having trouble removing a thin strip from a larger piece without damaging the piece you need, is to use a nipper. Most people seem to use nippers to "cut" tiles, as if using scissors. IMO, that's generally a bad technique.

Instead, just grab the tile (facing up) with the nipper. Keep the prssure on the nipper uniform and steady, and "break" pieces off with a doawnward motion of the hand/wrist.

With a little practise, you can nip of really long, thin strips in one go. There's also less chance of damaging the tile using the "breaking" technique instead of the scissoring technique.
 
G

Grace'sDad

The best way I've found to cut thin strips (4mm - 20mm) from porcelaine is to score cleanly just once, and then place the tile on a bench edge. Use nibblers to grip at the score line and use a pulling rather than crunching action to make the break, moving down the score line.

I've yet to find a tile this won't work on. If you get the technique right, the break is clean. If you get it wrong, you'll only remove the surface layer.
 
P

Perry

A tip if you've got trouble doing thin strips of porcelain, is to divide the tile so that the piece you want is 50% of the tile instead of, say, 20%. Makes it alot easier on really tough tiles.

If you're on the other hand having trouble removing a thin strip from a larger piece without damaging the piece you need, is to use a nipper. Most people seem to use nippers to "cut" tiles, as if using scissors. IMO, that's generally a bad technique.

Instead, just grab the tile (facing up) with the nipper. Keep the prssure on the nipper uniform and steady, and "break" pieces off with a doawnward motion of the hand/wrist.

With a little practise, you can nip of really long, thin strips in one go. There's also less chance of damaging the tile using the "breaking" technique instead of the scissoring technique.
if you are cutting small strips if you do say 55% on the cut you want and 45% on the other piece if it breaks it will be the smaller side that breaks and you will still be able to rescue the cut be careful breaking over your knee ect have lots of scars to prove why:pete
 
S

sWe

The best way I've found to cut thin strips (4mm - 20mm) from porcelaine is to score cleanly just once, and then place the tile on a bench edge. Use nibblers to grip at the score line and use a pulling rather than crunching action to make the break, moving down the score line.

I've yet to find a tile this won't work on. If you get the technique right, the break is clean. If you get it wrong, you'll only remove the surface layer.

It seems I forgot to mention that you're supposed to score the tile as well.
Other than that, we're describing the same thing :)
 
D

Deleted member 1779

And as I always say on porcleain posts



Dont forget your drill bits......


12a.jpg


(Well I would - wouldnt I)
 

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