cutting porcelain help required

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herny80

Hi, I have my first porcelain tile job starting next week. I have a rubi 600 tile cutter and only a cheap 600w wet cutter with a basic diamond blade. they have done the job so far but I am worried that I wont be able to cut the tile. Does anybody know if these will do the job. its a kitchen wall so there are plenty of plug sockets to cut around.
Do i need a better blade? will 600w motor be enough?

Any advise appreciated thanks. :huh2:
 
My briccolina cuts porcelain and it only has 330w. It is the blade really that is more important. With a lower power motor you just have to cut more slowly.
 
I'm just finishing off 10 sq m of porcelain 100 x 100 tiles on the diamond. Had to do hundreds of cuts around sockets, corners, into chimneys and windows etc. My cheap and cheerful Plasplugs Contractor is still going strong! If your going to do a lot of porcelain work then it may be worth getting something a little more substantial but as it's still early days i would just buy a new blade for the job and price it in accordingly.


Best of luck

cjbombero
 
If you are going to cut porcelain then get one of these
TradeTiler.Ltd Marcrist Diamond wheels
I used on on my 40 quid wet cutter when i started, the cutter last 6 months before the motor packed in, the wheel was still in good nick. The cutter stalled with its origional wheel when trying to cut porcelain at the start. I now use a rubi wet cutter with 200mm wheel, super even for 600 x 600's
I have TS 600 and got a few of the gold scoring wheels, 18mm and 10mm. They eat porcelain, never break a cut and can cut slivers off large format tiles, no bother. I can see you having much bother will wall tiles with the standard blade, just push hard and firm!
 
Thanks for the advise guys, the blade recomended looks great but it costs £56.00 for the blade i need, anybody got any cheaper options the job i have is fairly small just the usual plug sockets. the dimentions for the blade i need is 180mm x 24.5 bore.
 
Try the job with the standard balde, or borrow a tile to try it at home beforehand, it should cut the thinner wall tiles just slower. However my advice is invest in the blade, you will see some difference.
 
You shouldn't need to wet cut anything. I use a standard 4 inch angle grinder with a continuous rim diamond blade to plunge cut power sockets or corner cuts. Around windows I'll scribe the corner cut on my tile cutter and the finish with the grinder to prevent chipping.
 
I have just bought a new blade from my local tile shop as i need it for tuesday with bank holiday monday i was a little worried it wouldnt arrive on time if i ordered off the internet they said it will do the job its a cutman blade I dont know if its any good or how long it will last as i cannot see porcelain written anywhere on it. Is a angle grinder the way ahead?
 
Is an angle grinder the way ahead? A simple question, but hard to answer. I almost use an angle grider exclusively for my day to day tiling and it does keep the job moving along quicker. (Less setup time alot less fiddling around) If you want to become more advanced in tile fixing then it would be a good idea to get to know how to use an angle grinder properly. It does take practice as most things do, but once you get used to an angle grinder I can't see that you would want to go back to using a wet saw. So to answer the question if you are willing to incorporate new techniques into your tiling day then yes the humble angle grinder IME is the way forward.:thumbsup:
 
Yes, Brian showed me how to use one of these on tiles the other day and i can see that practising with one would develope your tiling and speed you up. Cheers Bri:thumbsup:

However watch your fingers, that wheel must be spinning about 10000rpm
 

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