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Red Green Red Green is offline
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Default Oscillating tools - loud and not that great?

" wrote in
:

On Tue, 14 Jun 2011 14:40:13 GMT, Red Green
wrote:

" wrote in
m:

On Tue, 14 Jun 2011 04:32:34 GMT, Red Green
wrote:

Vic Smith wrote in
m:

On Fri, 10 Jun 2011 09:44:54 -0700 (PDT), Bryan Scholtes
wrote:

Maybe it's the tool I bought, but whenever I use my new
oscillating tool I'm just not impressed with it.

Cutting wood takes too long. Cutting metal (cuting nails) takes
much too long versus a Dremel. And it's LOUD.

I bought a Menards-brand Li-Ion cordless model. Is there THAT much
of a difference versus the others? I can't find a review that
implies cheap oscillating tools are necessarily worse than, say,
Rockwells.

I know that cheap power tools aren't as good as expensive power
tools. But when I buy Harbor Freight I get about 80% of the
effectiveness and ease-of-use.

I bought a HF multi-tool when I did some remodeling last year.
Basically to cut the door stops near the floor so I could fit
thresholds. Worked fine.

Yes, excellent.

Also worked well for some sanding in tight spots.

Never tried for that.

It's not loud at all.

Working inside, I disagree.

Anticipate using it for cleaning out tile grout and some more
sanding.

I've used it for grout but found it very slow. Especially on very
old grout. Crappy HF blades I assume. What literally rips through
grout, and I mean like a few feet per minute, is a Rotozip with a
diamond blade.

...and makes a total mess of the tile in the meantime. The bits
don't last long, either.


Bits? You talking about a rotary tool?


Well, that's kinda what a "Roto-Zip" is, so yeah.


OK, too vague on my part. I meant a Rotozip ZipSaw with a 4" circular
blade. Rotozip also has the spiral saw which has bits.

I had no tile damage with it but it will damage tile very easily if
you're not careful. In the right application that's a good thing. Same
tool/blade I used to cut a circle in tile for the toilet flange. Cut it
so pretty it was a shame to cover it :-)


I was addressing the HF-MF tool that uses blades.


Is that why you said: "What literally rips through grout, and I mean
like a few feet per minute, is a Rotozip with a diamond blade."?

*THAT* is what I was addressing.