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[email protected] August 23rd 05 12:41 AM

Who makes a decent tile saw?
 
I'm shopping for a decent tile saw, for my DIY projects. Tile isn't
something I do everyday for a living, but I hate buying junk that only
last a couple of years or less, but of course I don't want to pay an
arm and a leg, so I'm also would consider a good used one. Any good
recommendations? Is Felker a good brand? I've always like my Dewalt
tools, but their tile saws are around $1000, a little too much.


User Example August 23rd 05 12:47 AM

I bought one on sale from Home Depot for around $80. It isn't a
professional tool but it has been able to do everything I have needed
with the tiling I have done. It's small enough to thrown in the shed
when I am done. Unless you do a lot of projects I would recommend one
of these.


wrote:
I'm shopping for a decent tile saw, for my DIY projects. Tile isn't
something I do everyday for a living, but I hate buying junk that only
last a couple of years or less, but of course I don't want to pay an
arm and a leg, so I'm also would consider a good used one. Any good
recommendations? Is Felker a good brand? I've always like my Dewalt
tools, but their tile saws are around $1000, a little too much.


Sacramento Dave August 23rd 05 02:41 AM


wrote in message
ps.com...
I'm shopping for a decent tile saw, for my DIY projects. Tile isn't
something I do everyday for a living, but I hate buying junk that only
last a couple of years or less, but of course I don't want to pay an
arm and a leg, so I'm also would consider a good used one. Any good
recommendations? Is Felker a good brand? I've always like my Dewalt
tools, but their tile saws are around $1000, a little too much.


I don't know what you budget is. I bought ( about 6 Months ago) an MK 770
EXP from tool crib for $500 and that included a stand. The EXP will do 20"
tiles. I would not consider it a professional saw but top of the line home
owner.The only thing I can say I whish I bought it ten years. I have always
used a snap cutter and 4" grinder with a diamond blade. I only do tile once
in awhile, but I just did 800sq ft of 18". The saw is worth every Penney.
The only way to go night and day. MK is one of the top tile tool Co. so
check them out.



User Example August 23rd 05 02:58 AM


I don't know what you budget is. I bought ( about 6 Months ago) an MK 770
EXP from tool crib for $500 and that included a stand. The EXP will do 20"
tiles. I would not consider it a professional saw but top of the line home
owner.The only thing I can say I whish I bought it ten years. I have always
used a snap cutter and 4" grinder with a diamond blade. I only do tile once
in awhile, but I just did 800sq ft of 18". The saw is worth every Penney.
The only way to go night and day. MK is one of the top tile tool Co. so
check them out.


Just curious... do you use a saw for every cut or just the corner cuts?
I find it faster to user one of those scribe cutters for most straight
cuts and they do a good job. I rarely used my tile saw.

Sacramento Dave August 23rd 05 03:58 AM


Just curious... do you use a saw for every cut or just the corner cuts?
I find it faster to user one of those scribe cutters for most straight
cuts and they do a good job. I rarely used my tile saw.


I used it for all the cuts my snap cutter would not cut 18" I did have to
use the peanut grinder and nippers on parts of some cuts. (Going around
door casing) If I was using smaller tile I would of used the snap cutter it
is faster and allot quieter.



Fred August 23rd 05 02:06 PM


"Sacramento Dave" wrote in message
. ..

wrote in message
ps.com...
I'm shopping for a decent tile saw, for my DIY projects. Tile isn't
something I do everyday for a living, but I hate buying junk that only
last a couple of years or less, but of course I don't want to pay an
arm and a leg, so I'm also would consider a good used one. Any good
recommendations? Is Felker a good brand? I've always like my Dewalt
tools, but their tile saws are around $1000, a little too much.


I don't know what you budget is. I bought ( about 6 Months ago) an MK 770
EXP from tool crib for $500 and that included a stand. The EXP will do 20"
tiles. I would not consider it a professional saw but top of the line home
owner.The only thing I can say I whish I bought it ten years. I have
always
used a snap cutter and 4" grinder with a diamond blade. I only do tile
once
in awhile, but I just did 800sq ft of 18". The saw is worth every Penney.
The only way to go night and day. MK is one of the top tile tool Co. so
check them out.



Cool! I'm surprised this 7" saw could do 20" cuts. How do you like the
sliding table, is it smooth?

MK is excellent but with the price to match. For the OP Home Depot has a 10"
saw for $500 and it goes on sales for $400 and comes complete with 10"
diamond blade and stand maybe cheaper now. I bought mine a year ago and its
been excellent except for the sliding table which doesn't slide smoothly but
cuts are good with marble, granite and even with 3" thick bricks . Quality
is not the same class as MK but it works for me. He should also look at the
one from Harbor Freight that goes for $200 on sale - blade and stand extra.
Someone said its the same one, to be verify, for $500 at Home Depot which
I'm happy with. If he is concern with quality and doesn't need deep cuts
your MK 700 EXP looks like an excellent choice.



Charles Spitzer August 23rd 05 04:06 PM


"Fred" wrote in message
...

"Sacramento Dave" wrote in message
. ..

wrote in message
ps.com...
I'm shopping for a decent tile saw, for my DIY projects. Tile isn't
something I do everyday for a living, but I hate buying junk that only
last a couple of years or less, but of course I don't want to pay an
arm and a leg, so I'm also would consider a good used one. Any good
recommendations? Is Felker a good brand? I've always like my Dewalt
tools, but their tile saws are around $1000, a little too much.


I don't know what you budget is. I bought ( about 6 Months ago) an MK 770
EXP from tool crib for $500 and that included a stand. The EXP will do
20"
tiles. I would not consider it a professional saw but top of the line
home
owner.The only thing I can say I whish I bought it ten years. I have
always
used a snap cutter and 4" grinder with a diamond blade. I only do tile
once
in awhile, but I just did 800sq ft of 18". The saw is worth every
Penney.
The only way to go night and day. MK is one of the top tile tool Co. so
check them out.



Cool! I'm surprised this 7" saw could do 20" cuts. How do you like the
sliding table, is it smooth?

MK is excellent but with the price to match. For the OP Home Depot has a
10" saw for $500 and it goes on sales for $400 and comes complete with 10"
diamond blade and stand maybe cheaper now. I bought mine a year ago and
its been excellent except for the sliding table which doesn't slide
smoothly but cuts are good with marble, granite and even with 3" thick
bricks . Quality is not the same class as MK but it works for me. He
should also look at the one from Harbor Freight that goes for $200 on
sale - blade and stand extra. Someone said its the same one, to be verify,
for $500 at Home Depot which I'm happy with. If he is concern with quality
and doesn't need deep cuts your MK 700 EXP looks like an excellent choice.


i have the harbor freight one. it's not the same as the home depot one, and
isn't up to the quality of an mk, but i've used it for thousands of feet of
tile, and currently use it to cut glass and granite up to 2" thick without
any problems. the blade it comes with is pretty much junk; you'll wind up
replacing it with a better one (you can get mk blades at home depot) pretty
soon.

regards,
charlie
http://glassartists.org/chaniarts



[email protected] August 23rd 05 06:19 PM

HD is really pushing the rental business. The equipment is in good
shape.
What I have done in the past is lay the floor out first, mark all the
tiles and cut them before you even mix the cement. Even if you have to
rent the saw for an extra day, it was about $60 for the day (if I
remember correctly).

If the tile is going anywhere where the cut edge is visiable, stay away
from the $80 table-saw-style wetsaws. The sliding tray makes sure the
cuts are smooth and even. I had a cheap $80 wetsaw and it was fine for
straight cuts where the cut edge was hidden by baseboard.

kubie


Ulysses August 23rd 05 11:46 PM


"Sacramento Dave" wrote in message
. ..

Just curious... do you use a saw for every cut or just the corner cuts?
I find it faster to user one of those scribe cutters for most straight
cuts and they do a good job. I rarely used my tile saw.


I used it for all the cuts my snap cutter would not cut 18" I did have to
use the peanut grinder and nippers on parts of some cuts. (Going around
door casing) If I was using smaller tile I would of used the snap cutter

it
is faster and allot quieter.



If you are taking about just straight cuts on floor tiles then all you need
is a glass cutter. Running pliers are helpful but not absolutely necessary
unless you are trying to trim off 1 inch or less.

I used one glass cutter to do a large kitchen, a bathroom, and an entry.
The cutter cost around $2 or $3. You just score and snap or use running
pliers at the end of the score and squeeze.

For inside corner cuts I used a round carbide hack saw blade that cost about
$6.

When I was done people wanted me to redo their tile floors because it looked
so much better than the "professional" job they paid for.




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