You're just amazing! I'm a DIY guy. I've tiled both of my bathrooms. I enjoy tiling. I recently found your channel and can't quit watching your videos. All the content is what people need to know. You are such a craftsman.
This guy is a master tilesman, there is no way a beginner can do these cuts using the machines in the way he is using each different tool. Even the cuts that look a bit jagged and messy at first glance, you can tell, by his face, these are just for locations that will not be seen; like under a door jamb, perfect fit I bet.
my jaw dropped, I was searching and searching for how to make a certain cut, and you did it! I wasted 3 large tiles making ugly cuts. I finally found the technique. Using different tools, especially even using a cheap wet saw (I thought my mistakes were because of the cheap wet saw I have) it gives me hope that maybe my tiling project will look almost like the pros. You are a Master of you trade. Thank you Sal !!!!
Hi Sal. I had a cutter years ago that we used for cutting specially made 200mmx200mmx 30mm thick quarry tiles. The tiles were super hard and for a factory floor where huge heavy lathes were going to be installed.( Tiles fixed in sand/cement) The cutter was a push pull type and at the end nearest to you there was a clamp that before scoring, you would tighten down 2 legs, real tight, onto the face of the tile,and then when the cutting wheel was pulled along the tile face, bang, the tile snapped. There was no other cutter that would touch these tiles, man they were hard. That cutting machine weighed a ton and I have never seen the likes of since. Got stolen from my van years ago and have never been able to replace.
Sal you are unbelievably talented. Thank you so much for continuing to post these fantastic videos that serve to educate the rest of us on why its important to do things the correct way. I am in the process of remodeling a three season porch and my wife wanted me to install a wood-plank tile that was 40" long. I had initially told her that I could not do it because my wet saw would only rip cut 24". Thanks to this video I see that I can in fact cut longer tiles. I wouldn't have thought to do what you showed. Thanks again!
Sal, what an awesome video, I've learned so much on the use of the different ways to cut tile, that I never knew before. Thank you for sharing this with all of us, you still remain #1 by me.
One of the first things I learnt years ago was cutting a circle out of the middle of a ceramic tile using a club hammer and a modified pein hammer. Who here knows how to do that? And manual metering with hammers and files. Thank the heavens for power tools!
I learn by watching, and this taught me so much about what tools are good for what kind of cuts. Different combinations can get you similar or identical cuts. There is no 1 perfect way, there is many correct ways to do specific types of cuts. Thanks my man Sal, I been to a few tile channels and this one is the best so far. I hope your streaming stuff goes smoothly I look forward to seeing some live stuff down the line.
Would love some tips for cutting circles that are larger than the largest diamond hole saw but smaller than you can comfortably cut with an angle grinder
Thanks for the clarification. Stil, I'm afraid of saws. My dad was a pro and lost his finger. BTW, I couldn't cut my tile with the manual. You seem to scratch the surface so easily. I was straining and pulling and pushing and couldn't get through the surface. What don't I know?
Do you like sigma snap cutters? I think they are by far the best snap cutters on the market. Also, what brand and model of diamond wheels do you recommend both for grinders and wet saws for a general purpose blade that can cut a wide variety of materials?
You have a few options, use a wet saw that will fit a very large tile, don't laugh they do make them, I have one that will cut up to a 48" tile. Use a grinder with a good quality dry cutting diamond blade, or you can aquire tools to cut gauged porcelain tile panels made specifically to cut those types of tiles. Just be very aware that these types of tiles require special setting methods.
Sal DiBlasi we haven't done the project yet. There are only a couple of videos on youtube with mother of pearl backsplash installation. They just used tile snippers. I was curious what you thought. Thanks for replying
Thanks for the video. Between Sals and StarrTile videos I should be able to figure some this tile stuff out. I think would need to get some good water resistant glove thought, hold that stuff up to a saw looks a bit risky for me.
One does it right, the other does not, one follows industry standards, the other does not. One promotes the correct method, the other promotes the opposite. You figure out which is which.
StarrTile is nowhere near Sal's level. I do think StarrTile has the honour of the best "worst tile job" video on TH-cam, but that's about it. If you want to see another tile professional, then I'd recommend TileMasterGa, but he hardly has any content.
Thanks for the pointer. Wow, his bench from 2010 looks like the way to go to me. Just flipping through the thumbnails I didn't see much foam or plastic.
Very interesting video, but I saw nothing showing a safe way cutting those little 2x2 tiles on a sheet, doing a back splash in the kitchen and need to cut some in half. I Have thought about using a old 4x6 tile underneath but then thought it will shoot out towards me. I'm using a Dewalt wet tile saw like you have.
What dewalt tile cutter is that. I'm just starting out so I will be getting the best tools. Carry less of a load and use your knee pads when kneeling down on the job. Use both your hands to help you getting up off the tiles. Avoid caring to heavy loads, do more trips. Lift lighter loads with a straight back. Always use a 3m mask to protect your lungs and wear gloves and safety glasses. Extraction hoover.
Sal, do you still have all those wet saws and use them for specific jobs, or are they ones you have just used over the years? Also, have you gone through many angle grinders over the years? Is the dust hard on them?
I still have the wet saws and use them when needed, as far as angle grinders, I have three of them, one variable speed for polishing and two standard grinders. I have to say they last a very long time. Variable speed amzn.to/2KLb4BB Single speed amzn.to/2UnRFXe
Great video showing many different cutting scenarios I have a question about cutting out a section from a long plank tile to leave essentially an 'L' shape (let's say 8 x 48 tile, cut section out 3 x 36 from one end) - I did see in the video successful demonstration of a long plank ripped lengthwise in the wet-saw - very nice! Wondering about the feasibility of this: If you have long enough score cutter, if you were to first cut the 3" slot completely (tile saw or angle grinder) then score down the 36" lengthwise, would this successfully snap, leaving the end of the tile intact as the desired 'L'? In my head it sounds feasible, not sure how that translates to actual event! :) Taken one step further - if it was notch - same type of scenario, but the 3 x 35 'notch' would be leaving 6" length of full width at each end; cut the short cuts first (again with the wet saw or grinder) then scoring the 36 and snapping at the beginning of first section? I imagine you might cut multiple slots but wondering if it would work as outlined, just one cut at each end, score and snap?
It might be possible, and I have actually done exactly what you suggest, but with shorter tiles, the longer the tile, the more difficult it becomes. Only way to know is to try.
For wood-look large (long) tiles with really deep texture / grain - can those be cut straight with regular tile cutter or you need to use cutting wheel, wet or dry? I'm concerned that deep grain might cause off the course breaking like. Haven't tried it, but preparing myself :-)
Some will some will not, some cutters do a better job than others. if you have a professional grade tile cutter, there is a good chance it will work, if you have a cheap cutter, don't even bother trying.
Hi Sal I like your method we do it slightly different we grind out the circle just to break through the glaze then we grind it into pizza slices then tap them out and finish the circle by grinding from the back have you tried this method if so what's faster and more accurate? Cheers Sal Matt
Done it many different ways, including Core bits. It really depends on the tile, some will crack every time you try to cut them with a grinder, others will cut easy, so I adapt to the circumstances, I have even had to finish a cut after the tile was installed to be able to do it without cracking. Here is an example. th-cam.com/video/voZSOwghou0/w-d-xo.html
It says max rom on the blade 13000 but my grinder is variable up to 11000, should I go to the full 11000? For some reason on the videos looks like the cutting wheel rolls slower, that is why am asking, am in doubt.
Hi. Sal. Im a tiler but I still learn a lot from your videos. I have the same dewalt wet saw but find it hard to mark polished tiles without the water washing off the mark. What do you use
John Reddin straight cuts just use the ruler on the tray or measure to the blade and make a mark on the tray with sharpie. other cuts use a piece of masking tape and mark that.
Hey Sal-huge fan! I’m doing my very first tile work. What saw, blade combination would cut porcelain tile with the least amount of jagged edge? Have you ever sanded a tile down to remove those little buggers from the cut side? I’m trying to put cuts next to Schluter trim for a shower niche but I’m not impressed with our 7” plasplugs saw. Thanks sal
Need a better saw and a better blade, there are a lot to choose from, the blades that come with the saws are usually low end, buy a blade appropriate for the material you are cutting. The matrix and the diamonds in the blade will vary depending on the material. A glass tile blade for example will have a softer matrix with a fine diamond tightly packed to produce clean smooth cuts in the glass, it will cut porcelain but the blade will wear out fast and be a slow cut.
researching to tile for my ist time.learned much from this vid..thanks 10:26 into the vid what is the name of the electric palm tool that you are using, never seen one like that before. what an asset for the tool box ..thank you.
Great videos. They have helped me a ton. I still have problems cutting marble chair railing with my wet saw. It tends to chip or break off at the end of the cut. I am using a ceramic/porcelain blade. May bee that is my problem? Anyways thanks for you spending your time making these vids.
Sal DiBlasi I have dressed the blade like a lot of people have said. I cut a thin slice off of a concrete paver then changed out the water. At least I think this is dressing the blade. This has helped out on all my tiles. I will research and get a marble specific blade next time. Thanks again!
Maybe make the handles longer on a snap cutter or make a cam system that makes less effort on the hands. It's all about making life easier. Also instead of lifting the tile to 45 degrees have the flat bench elevated on the machine or suggested to manufacturers. Your hands where very close to that dangerous blade.
David Patheyjohns David Patheyjohns I know what you mean. One slip and it's all over for your career. Why take chances? Sometime men do not think about safety, they rush into stuff.
Hi Sal, I’m finally about to tile my 10x13 bathroom floor over Ditra heat tomorrow. I’m installing 24x24 tile and I’ll be using Mapei uncoupling mortar. I live in the same state as you. My question is with all of this humidity will it still be ok to install the tiles in these conditions? Ty
Hello, Master DIBLASI, we look at you a lot on the other side of the Atlantic! LOL, I'm contacting you because I would like to buy a good water saw, but I do not know what to take. The dewalt looks good, I also hesitate with the model TS60 from HUSQVARNA. I am looking for a good machine versatile and easy to carry, and if possible that does not put water everywhere because I cut often indoors. I am a specialist in the turnkey bathroom, I rarely install tiles of dimmension greater than 60cm. Thank you for your return, and feel free to discover my channel! Greeting
I have a Dewalt, and love it amzn.to/2CyOXpM the beat is a great saw, but water containment need improvement, amzn.to/2EeSERN I have heard good things about the Husqvarna amzn.to/2qAu9wf for water containment when you need it get one of these which is what I use Tile Saw Shack amzn.to/2CB7OjP
Man o Man you are a rare dinosaur. That's a compliment. More Asholes out there claiming they know what they are doing then you can imagine.One guy I actually stopped him midway and sent him home.Here's the worst part. He was highly recommended by a Large tile store.The art is dying out. They better come out with disposable stick on tiles for these brainless modern tradesman.
You're just amazing! I'm a DIY guy. I've tiled both of my bathrooms. I enjoy tiling. I recently found your channel and can't quit watching your videos. All the content is what people need to know. You are such a craftsman.
Thank you! 😊
24:15 I've never seen someone successfully cutting a curve with a manual sliding tile cutter until now. You are a master craftsman!
Agreed, watched the whole video and thought, now that was a cut!
This guy is a master tilesman, there is no way a beginner can do these cuts using the machines in the way he is using each different tool. Even the cuts that look a bit jagged and messy at first glance, you can tell, by his face, these are just for locations that will not be seen; like under a door jamb, perfect fit I bet.
my jaw dropped, I was searching and searching for how to make a certain cut, and you did it! I wasted 3 large tiles making ugly cuts. I finally found the technique. Using different tools, especially even using a cheap wet saw (I thought my mistakes were because of the cheap wet saw I have) it gives me hope that maybe my tiling project will look almost like the pros. You are a Master of you trade. Thank you Sal !!!!
Thanks, glad it helped
Even for those of us that have tiled dozens & dozend of bathrooms, this was a pleasurable watch! Great workmanship Sal!!!
Glad you enjoyed it
Your videos are so encouraging for me to start my first tile project! You make it look fun.
Your deserve every good comment and thumbs up
Hi Sal. I had a cutter years ago that we used for cutting specially made 200mmx200mmx 30mm thick quarry tiles. The tiles were super hard and for a factory floor where huge heavy lathes were going to be installed.( Tiles fixed in sand/cement) The cutter was a push pull type and at the end nearest to you there was a clamp that before scoring, you would tighten down 2 legs, real tight, onto the face of the tile,and then when the cutting wheel was pulled along the tile face, bang, the tile snapped. There was no other cutter that would touch these tiles, man they were hard. That cutting machine weighed a ton and I have never seen the likes of since. Got stolen from my van years ago and have never been able to replace.
Sal you are unbelievably talented. Thank you so much for continuing to post these fantastic videos that serve to educate the rest of us on why its important to do things the correct way. I am in the process of remodeling a three season porch and my wife wanted me to install a wood-plank tile that was 40" long. I had initially told her that I could not do it because my wet saw would only rip cut 24". Thanks to this video I see that I can in fact cut longer tiles. I wouldn't have thought to do what you showed. Thanks again!
Your welcome.
Sal, what an awesome video, I've learned so much on the use of the different ways to cut tile, that I never knew before. Thank you for sharing this with all of us, you still remain #1 by me.
You're welcome.😀
One of the first things I learnt years ago was cutting a circle out of the middle of a ceramic tile using a club hammer and a modified pein hammer. Who here knows how to do that? And manual metering with hammers and files. Thank the heavens for power tools!
Just came across this video. Great learning tool. Thanks for posting.
Glad it was helpful!
I learn by watching, and this taught me so much about what tools are good for what kind of cuts. Different combinations can get you similar or identical cuts. There is no 1 perfect way, there is many correct ways to do specific types of cuts. Thanks my man Sal, I been to a few tile channels and this one is the best so far. I hope your streaming stuff goes smoothly I look forward to seeing some live stuff down the line.
Thanks, live video coming soon.
I learned a lot from this video, thank you. I especially appreciate you showing your tricks with the score and snap cutter.
Tile has always been best wall and floor surface, only negative is , it's so labour intensive.
Would love some tips for cutting circles that are larger than the largest diamond hole saw but smaller than you can comfortably cut with an angle grinder
th-cam.com/video/Y8f-8tHU1fE/w-d-xo.html
Been watching all your vids. You helped me tremendously on a bathroom remodel job. Thanks so much. Don't think i could have done it without your help
Thanks for the clarification. Stil, I'm afraid of saws. My dad was a pro and lost his finger. BTW, I couldn't cut my tile with the manual. You seem to scratch the surface so easily. I was straining and pulling and pushing and couldn't get through the surface. What don't I know?
The quality of the nap cutter makes all the difference.
You are a very talented man. Watching your hands so close to those saw blades made me cringe. Great video and Thank you for sharing!😀👍
Every time I see your tile nippers I think of the dentist crushing out a tooth lol...eesh.. great vids even going back and re watching.
i forgot they did that... I think you just brought back a repressed memory😂
the most crisp *crack* my ears ever did hear
I have an angle grinder, but is there any other way to get a hacksaw blade to cut tile (5 of them) if you don't have the other tools?
What would you most likely to use to cut straight on hard porcelain tiles .. wet saw or montolit manual tile cutter??
You are the best. That’s it…..
12:00 The grinder saying Yeaah yeaah yeaahh in a froggy tone
Sal, how are you scoring the curved cuts on the larger format/thicker tile before you go to the wet cutter and use the nippers to remove the excess?
Sal just showing off his skills lol.
Do you like sigma snap cutters? I think they are by far the best snap cutters on the market. Also, what brand and model of diamond wheels do you recommend both for grinders and wet saws for a general purpose blade that can cut a wide variety of materials?
How would you cut down large format porcelain tile? For e.g., a 63"x63" tile that needs to be cut into pieces for a fireplace surround.
You have a few options, use a wet saw that will fit a very large tile, don't laugh they do make them, I have one that will cut up to a 48" tile. Use a grinder with a good quality dry cutting diamond blade, or you can aquire tools to cut gauged porcelain tile panels made specifically to cut those types of tiles. Just be very aware that these types of tiles require special setting methods.
Superb video. Eye opener for education. Thanks.
Good to know. That works way better than a chainsaw. 😀
Is it hard to cut mother of pearl tile on a wet saw? Or because they are so thin and fragile, should you just cut them with tile snippers? Thank you
Maybe you were using the wrong kind of blade.
Sal DiBlasi we haven't done the project yet. There are only a couple of videos on youtube with mother of pearl backsplash installation. They just used tile snippers. I was curious what you thought. Thanks for replying
6:40 is an example of what NEVER to do near a circular saw. One slip and you're done for life.
It is not a circular saw, it is a wet saw, two very different tools. One will chop your finger off, the other will not.
Anyone know how the rigid wet saws hold up over time? I’ve heard that the dewalts have lifetimes over 10+ years.
Thank you so much!
You're welcome!
Curious to see how straight the tile is. I am leaning but for some reason the cut bears slightly to one side.
That is the saw or the blade. Try dressing the blade.
@@SalDiBlasi blade - dressing?
What is safe to use as a marker for cutting tiles on marble and do you mark on the underside or glossy top side?
I will usually use a pencil and restrict the marks to just the area to be cut, or a Crayon marker for tile amzn.to/2WomqvX
Lots of value in that one. Thanks.
Good video Sal
Thanks for the video. Between Sals and StarrTile videos I should be able to figure some this tile stuff out.
I think would need to get some good water resistant glove thought, hold that stuff up to a saw looks a bit risky for me.
One does it right, the other does not, one follows industry standards, the other does not. One promotes the correct method, the other promotes the opposite. You figure out which is which.
Yeah star promotes a lot of his own ideas with no industry standards behind them at all.
StarrTile is nowhere near Sal's level. I do think StarrTile has the honour of the best "worst tile job" video on TH-cam, but that's about it. If you want to see another tile professional, then I'd recommend TileMasterGa, but he hardly has any content.
Thanks for the pointer. Wow, his bench from 2010 looks like the way to go to me. Just flipping through the thumbnails I didn't see much foam or plastic.
Very interesting video, but I saw nothing showing a safe way cutting those little 2x2 tiles on a sheet, doing a back splash in the kitchen and need to cut some in half. I Have thought about using a old 4x6 tile underneath but then thought it will shoot out towards me. I'm using a Dewalt wet tile saw like you have.
What do you mean by "Safe Way"
I need to cut the little tiles in half, I don't want them shooting towards me. Have thought about double sided tape. These are the 12x12 sheets
Gazooo29 At the beginning he showed a quick look at a similar tile that he tapped together to keep them from jumping around.
What dewalt tile cutter is that. I'm just starting out so I will be getting the best tools. Carry less of a load and use your knee pads when kneeling down on the job. Use both your hands to help you getting up off the tiles. Avoid caring to heavy loads, do more trips. Lift lighter loads with a straight back. Always use a 3m mask to protect your lungs and wear gloves and safety glasses. Extraction hoover.
Dewalt wet saw amzn.to/2oIoXTj
Enjoy watching just to refresh my brain
So which on is better, porcelain tiles or ceramic tile , both are high-quality one.?
Depends what you intend to use it for, on floors porcelain is probably the better choice, on walls, either will usually work just fine.
@@SalDiBlasi Thanks for your reply. And You're so at tile installation
Sal, do you still have all those wet saws and use them for specific jobs, or are they ones you have just used over the years? Also, have you gone through many angle grinders over the years? Is the dust hard on them?
I still have the wet saws and use them when needed, as far as angle grinders, I have three of them, one variable speed for polishing and two standard grinders. I have to say they last a very long time.
Variable speed amzn.to/2KLb4BB
Single speed amzn.to/2UnRFXe
Great video showing many different cutting scenarios
I have a question about cutting out a section from a long plank tile to leave essentially an 'L' shape (let's say 8 x 48 tile, cut section out 3 x 36 from one end) - I did see in the video successful demonstration of a long plank ripped lengthwise in the wet-saw - very nice!
Wondering about the feasibility of this: If you have long enough score cutter, if you were to first cut the 3" slot completely (tile saw or angle grinder) then score down the 36" lengthwise, would this successfully snap, leaving the end of the tile intact as the desired 'L'? In my head it sounds feasible, not sure how that translates to actual event! :)
Taken one step further - if it was notch - same type of scenario, but the 3 x 35 'notch' would be leaving 6" length of full width at each end; cut the short cuts first (again with the wet saw or grinder) then scoring the 36 and snapping at the beginning of first section? I imagine you might cut multiple slots but wondering if it would work as outlined, just one cut at each end, score and snap?
It might be possible, and I have actually done exactly what you suggest, but with shorter tiles, the longer the tile, the more difficult it becomes. Only way to know is to try.
@@SalDiBlasi Appreciated!
For wood-look large (long) tiles with really deep texture / grain - can those be cut straight with regular tile cutter or you need to use cutting wheel, wet or dry? I'm concerned that deep grain might cause off the course breaking like. Haven't tried it, but preparing myself :-)
Some will some will not, some cutters do a better job than others. if you have a professional grade tile cutter, there is a good chance it will work, if you have a cheap cutter, don't even bother trying.
Hi Sal I like your method we do it slightly different we grind out the circle just to break through the glaze then we grind it into pizza slices then tap them out and finish the circle by grinding from the back have you tried this method if so what's faster and more accurate? Cheers Sal Matt
Done it many different ways, including Core bits. It really depends on the tile, some will crack every time you try to cut them with a grinder, others will cut easy, so I adapt to the circumstances, I have even had to finish a cut after the tile was installed to be able to do it without cracking. Here is an example. th-cam.com/video/voZSOwghou0/w-d-xo.html
How fast do you run your grinder (rpm’s), when cutting with a diamond blade 4-1/2” in dia? @saldiblasi
Look at the Blade RPM recommendation.
It says max rom on the blade 13000 but my grinder is variable up to 11000, should I go to the full 11000? For some reason on the videos looks like the cutting wheel rolls slower, that is why am asking, am in doubt.
That grinder runs at 11,000 rpms,.
Hi. Sal. Im a tiler but I still learn a lot from your videos. I have the same dewalt wet saw but find it hard to mark polished tiles without the water washing off the mark. What do you use
John Reddin straight cuts just use the ruler on the tray or measure to the blade and make a mark on the tray with sharpie. other cuts use a piece of masking tape and mark that.
www.pica-marker.com/en/pen/pica-dry-special-leads-water-jet-resistant
Or scratch the serface of the tile with a glass cutter wheel..
Hey Sal-huge fan! I’m doing my very first tile work. What saw, blade combination would cut porcelain tile with the least amount of jagged edge? Have you ever sanded a tile down to remove those little buggers from the cut side? I’m trying to put cuts next to Schluter trim for a shower niche but I’m not impressed with our 7” plasplugs saw. Thanks sal
Need a better saw and a better blade, there are a lot to choose from, the blades that come with the saws are usually low end, buy a blade appropriate for the material you are cutting. The matrix and the diamonds in the blade will vary depending on the material. A glass tile blade for example will have a softer matrix with a fine diamond tightly packed to produce clean smooth cuts in the glass, it will cut porcelain but the blade will wear out fast and be a slow cut.
Thats the man right there!
Hello Sal, Could a Glass Cutter Tool be used to cut shapes in tile free had?
Might be able to do it with some tiles.
Great video, learned a lot!
whats the best way to cut herringbone mosaic tile?
Same as any other mosaic tile, wet saw or snap cutter.
researching to tile for my ist time.learned much from this vid..thanks
10:26 into the vid what is the name of the electric palm tool that you are using, never seen one like that before. what an asset for the tool box ..thank you.
It’s called a angle grinder! With tile blade
Where can I get the best cutting wheel for my Clinker tile cutter?
Try www.contractorsdirect.com/
Great videos. They have helped me a ton. I still have problems cutting marble chair railing with my wet saw. It tends to chip or break off at the end of the cut. I am using a ceramic/porcelain blade. May bee that is my problem? Anyways thanks for you spending your time making these vids.
Dress tge blade, and a marble spesific blade will also do a better job. Could also be the saw.
Sal DiBlasi I have dressed the blade like a lot of people have said. I cut a thin slice off of a concrete paver then changed out the water. At least I think this is dressing the blade. This has helped out on all my tiles. I will research and get a marble specific blade next time. Thanks again!
Sal DiBlasi 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
Can you suggest a blade for bullnosing marble?
amzn.to/2Ht6jar amzn.to/2HrjKYl
Is that a regular pair of pliers?
Tile nippers amzn.to/2XjHUvT
Hi, what blades for your makita grinder do you recommend to cut tiles, marble, porcelain ? thanks again
This is a great blade. dibsmart.com/product/rubi-viper-diamond-blade-for-wet-cutting/
Try Marcrist ck850. Fantastic cutting wheel.
Maybe make the handles longer on a snap cutter or make a cam system that makes less effort on the hands. It's all about making life easier. Also instead of lifting the tile to 45 degrees have the flat bench elevated on the machine or suggested to manufacturers. Your hands where very close to that dangerous blade.
David Patheyjohns
David Patheyjohns
I know what you mean. One slip and it's all over for your career. Why take chances?
Sometime men do not think about safety, they rush into stuff.
LOL
What did size is the one on the grinder?
4.5"
Thank you
Hi Sal, I’m finally about to tile my 10x13 bathroom floor over Ditra heat tomorrow.
I’m installing 24x24 tile and I’ll be using Mapei uncoupling mortar. I live in the same state as you. My question is with all of this humidity will it still be ok to install the tiles in these conditions? Ty
I am installing every day, I certainly hope so. 😀
Is there anything you would like to improve regarding tools?
Un capo! 👍
Yo trabajo en colocación de cerámica también lindo oficio muy buenos trabajos te felicito creo q sos el Messi de la cerámica 😁
gustavo daniel Alvarado hola si usamos niveladores ceramicruz 🤔
Hello, Master DIBLASI, we look at you a lot on the other side of the Atlantic! LOL, I'm contacting you because I would like to buy a good water saw, but I do not know what to take. The dewalt looks good, I also hesitate with the model TS60 from HUSQVARNA. I am looking for a good machine versatile and easy to carry, and if possible that does not put water everywhere because I cut often indoors. I am a specialist in the turnkey bathroom, I rarely install tiles of dimmension greater than 60cm. Thank you for your return, and feel free to discover my channel! Greeting
I have a Dewalt, and love it amzn.to/2CyOXpM the beat is a great saw, but water containment need improvement, amzn.to/2EeSERN I have heard good things about the Husqvarna amzn.to/2qAu9wf for water containment when you need it get one of these which is what I use Tile Saw Shack amzn.to/2CB7OjP
How to cut 1" mosaic?
Idea for a video.
My anxiety went through the roof watching you cut tiny cuts on your table saw, your fingers way too close to a running blade. Stay safe friend.
📈
Wet saw, no danger here, blade has no teeth just a diamond encrusted smooth rim.
جيد شكرا
🙏🙏🙏❤❤❤👍
Very professional but arent you afraid cutting your fingers?
Man o Man you are a rare dinosaur. That's a compliment. More Asholes out there claiming they know what they are doing then you can imagine.One guy I actually stopped him midway and sent him home.Here's the worst part. He was highly recommended by a Large tile store.The art is dying out. They better come out with disposable stick on tiles for these brainless modern tradesman.
I don't care how good you are. Getting your fingers that close to the blade cannot be a good way to cut tiles. That's a recipe for disaster.
Actually not a problem, blade is smooth and dull, not like a table saw.
Your English is good but you need to show HOW
watch one of my other 800 plus videos, I show how to do pretty much everything