Cutting sqaure 'holes' in porcelain

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You may find an angle grinder (dry cutting) will heat up and break your porcelain, especially near an edge,
jigsaw blades will be no good for porcelain.
You need to plunge cut with a wet saw,or, as I do use a makita cordless tile saw,some hire shops have these
 
True.
Sometimes a grinder has too much vibration and will break fragile or brittle tiles.
But there is the possibility that they will break on the wet saw as well.
I will cut them with a wet saw at times also, same with vent holes.
If they are heating up, then you need a more aggressive blade.
I bought these cheap chinese 4" grinder blades and they just wouldn't cut, I worked at a piece for quite a while (with sparks flying and pieces of melted stone shooting everywhere), then realized the blade was junk and switched it back to my turbo blade which cut through the granite like butter.

There is no rule of thumb that you must follow.
Each different material will also have different characteristics, and so, as a tradesman, you need to develop a feel for what works best for you (and what tool is the most efficient) and gets the job done properly, which, at the end of the day, is all that matters.
 
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Angle grinder with a turbo blade....is better if you have not done plunge cuts before....

Plunge cutting next to a tile edge can be fatal for tile if you get the tile skew wiff and it grabs on the wheel causing it to break away...

A controlled cut with a grinder through the face of the tile then turn over and finish from the back the last bits that the grinder wheel didn't get to..:thumbsup:

Lay the tile on a bench/platform and clamp it down this will leave both hands free to steady the grinder..
Thats the correct answer and the easy way to complete the job:thumbsup:
 
I have never seen anyone in the trade ever clamp down a tile to cut it....ever.
I use a scrap of plywood to set the tile on and hold the tile with left hand and the angle grinder with the right.
Works great and is very safe....that is, if you have strong wrists and are familiar with a grinder.
If not, then find a different job, or practice up so you can keep up.
This isn't office work after all.
 
I have never seen anyone in the trade ever clamp down a tile to cut it....ever.
I use a scrap of plywood to set the tile on and hold the tile with left hand and the angle grinder with the right.
Works great and is very safe....that is, if you have strong wrists and are familiar with a grinder.
If not, then find a different job, or practice up so you can keep up.
This isn't office work after all.
here's a vid I did, granted it's ceramic, not porcelain:smilewinkgrin:[ame=http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=0i45Y1o-8Hs]YouTube - jig saw cutting[/ame]
 
I have never seen anyone in the trade ever clamp down a tile to cut it....ever.
I use a scrap of plywood to set the tile on and hold the tile with left hand and the angle grinder with the right.
Works great and is very safe....that is, if you have strong wrists and are familiar with a grinder.
If not, then find a different job, or practice up so you can keep up.
This isn't office work after all.


well now you have in dougs video...:lol:
 
Yes, Now I have, but it was only ceramic, after all.
I have those jigsaw blades and they just don't work on porc's or hard stone.
They do, however, work really good on soft slate and soft ceramics like saltillo pavers and wall tiles.
I have not used clamps though, but do what works for you.
 
on most jobs i set up an old bucket and fill it with water for weight,then i use this for setting tiles on for grinding,works a treat and it doesn't matter if you cut into it,its plastic.
 
hi all does any one cut plugs out the way i do.mark the plug to be cut on the front of the tile score the four lines on my snap cutter. then cut a cross from corner to corner then tap the four points of the cross one at a time and they drop out then you only do two cuts with the wet cutter instead of four cut on the wet cutter:8:
 

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