Great cuts Darren . I use both my tile saw and an angle grinder with tile blades . I have had great success with both of them. Great video guys keep them coming. Take care.
Yah, we’ve had problems with a lot of the 4 1/2 blades having chip out. LOL I’ve had these on the shelf for at least a year and figured they they would be the same quality as everything else. I was wrong.
Hey guy's awesome channel! What would be a cheap solution for a one-off project to cut river rock for my aquarium with a Ryobi angle grinder, not commercial use. I am figuring a garden hose and one of these two Rubi blades? Or do I even need to worry about water for like 10ft of 3in to 4in thick granite river rock? The cut edge won't be revealed and is not a concern.
I intend to use a grinder but only for outlet cut-outs, for the long cuts I'm renting a large wet tile saw which cuts up to 24" rip and uses a 10" diamond blade. Seems more cost effective to pay only $80 per day for the saw rental than to burn up many 4" blades in a grinder and get cuts nowhere near as straight, not even to mention the dust of dry cutting with a grinder. When blades in a wet saw get dull, you'll get tiny chips so don't use old blades on tiles in which the edge is going to show.
Both tools are great, the grinder is nice but to say it out performs a tile saw is a stretch. It takes a good amount of skill to keep a straight line with the grinder.
Great cuts Darren . I use both my tile saw and an angle grinder with tile blades . I have had great success with both of them. Great video guys keep them coming. Take care.
Yah, we’ve had problems with a lot of the 4 1/2 blades having chip out. LOL I’ve had these on the shelf for at least a year and figured they they would be the same quality as everything else. I was wrong.
Amen! Forget about the wet saw. I use grinder and blade and Montolit cutter for everything. No wet mess and drying and WAY quicker overall.
Gotta love the Montolit tile cutters. 👍
Great! But which cuts thinner in the middle of the porcelain tile?
Hey guy's awesome channel! What would be a cheap solution for a one-off project to cut river rock for my aquarium with a Ryobi angle grinder, not commercial use. I am figuring a garden hose and one of these two Rubi blades? Or do I even need to worry about water for like 10ft of 3in to 4in thick granite river rock? The cut edge won't be revealed and is not a concern.
Great cuts with those blades.
Those are some clean cuts!
They’re real nice.
Recommend you support the tile under the cut line. Less chance of chipping.
Im junst wondering what's the benefits of that narrow head metabo grinder?
Nice. I searched Amazon and it looks like they have the Rubi buckets. Not positive if it’s the exact model you have, but give it a look.
It’s a plastic bucket. I found it through EBay but they want 67.00 just to ship from the UK. Thanks for looking though.
great information, subd up for sure
I intend to use a grinder but only for outlet cut-outs, for the long cuts I'm renting a large wet tile saw which cuts up to 24" rip and uses a 10" diamond blade. Seems more cost effective to pay only $80 per day for the saw rental than to burn up many 4" blades in a grinder and get cuts nowhere near as straight, not even to mention the dust of dry cutting with a grinder. When blades in a wet saw get dull, you'll get tiny chips so don't use old blades on tiles in which the edge is going to show.
Dude, i gotta know, did Rubi ever hook you up with them buckets?
No 🫤😀🤬
Great video and great information.. I also take the guard off
Pro move
Both tools are great, the grinder is nice but to say it out performs a tile saw is a stretch. It takes a good amount of skill to keep a straight line with the grinder.
Will this blade cut granite? Fitting a new cooktop in and opening is 1/8 too small lol of course
These would be perfect for granite
How does it compare to the bad dog blade
For tile and such these Rubi’s are a better quality finish blade.
😎⚒️😎⚒️😎
Yes Sir
TRY PORCELAIN..!
That was porcelain #4.
Porcelain is no issue for a grinder and a quality blade like this.