Add Comment
|
Related Links
|
TrackBack
Tiling Tip #3 - Cutting Tiles on the CheapThe thoughts of cutting ceramic tiles had given me a headache these past few days. I just needed two little notches cut in two different tiles. I took two of them back to Lowes to have them cut the notches for me. While doing so, the Lowes employees chipped the tile in undesirable locations. Now I'm short a perfect tile. I can take another perfect tile to Lowes, but that means spending gas money and risk damaging another perfectly good tile. I can buy a wet tile cutter. The least expensive one is $88 at Lowes. But I am only going to cut two notches. Do I really want to spend almost a hundred bucks to cut two notches? While at Lowes, I spotted another option--a tile-cutting saber saw blade (see photo below). This $5 jigsaw blade was suppose to be able to cut stone and ceramic tiles. I decided to give it a try. And it worked, sort of. Mounting it onto my jigsaw was easy enough. But the next question was whether to set my variable-speed jigsaw to fast or slow. The packaging did not specify a speed. After cutting the notch I needed, the answer is to set it to medium. And it took a very long time to make a one inch cut. So it's no replacement for a wet cutter. But if you have a small cutting job and have enough patience, the tile-cutting blade can give you a piece of mind. Chieh Cheng
Add Comment
|
Related Links
|
TrackBack
Did your message disappear? Read the Forums FAQ. TrackBackTrackBack only accepted from WebSite-X Suite web sites. Do not submit TrackBacks from other sites. Send Ping | TrackBack URL | Spam Control Title: Tiling Tip #4 - Vise-Grip Can Help You Cut Tiles Add CommentSpam Control | * indicates required field Messages, files, and images copyright by respective owners. |
Articles
|
Wiki
82 Users Online
|
Copyright © 2004 - 2024. All Rights Reserved. |