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Over the time i have been on these fine forums, the most common tool question has to be what manual tile cutter is best. The problem being is that we will never all agree on the same brand but what is it that makes the cutter of your choice the one for you.
Over the last 30 years and before seeing as my dad is a tiler, i have seen most on the market and used most. From the days when Quarry tiles were cut with a smalll chisel and hammer up to date where my personal choice is a Sigma.
For me its the sigma, i like its rugged build and wheel life. Before that i thought i was a Rubi man forever. I can say for sure that its outlasted any of the Rubi TS models i ever owned.

So what is it you like about your choice of cutter?
 
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Peter

Always been a Sigma man myself. Fast, reliable and accurate. Tried a few of the twin rail push cutters and they seem to be tedious and time consuming. Suppose it's just what you're used to, but I'd have fired out a row of cuts on the Sigma before I even have a tile lined up on a twin rail push system. The Sigma's I have are all the older model style with the one sided angle (5b for 80 percent of jobs, 4a for 600s, and a baby one for splashbacks) although I've used some of the new style rotating base sigmas and they're very nice to use.
 
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hillhead

Always been a Sigma man myself. Fast, reliable and accurate. Tried a few of the twin rail push cutters and they seem to be tedious and time consuming. Suppose it's just what you're used to, but I'd have fired out a row of cuts on the Sigma before I even have a tile lined up on a twin rail push system. The Sigma's I have are all the older model style with the one sided angle (5b for 80 percent of jobs, 4a for 600s, and a baby one for splashbacks) although I've used some of the new style rotating base sigmas and they're very nice to use.
very nice to use,great locking mechanism for the angles too! locks both ways too:thumbsup:
 
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tilereophonics

Love my Rubi TS-50..... unfortunately due to very large tiles becoming more popular i'm going to have to upgrade!
 
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Peter

Feel like I can update this a bit more accurately as the last few days I've been using various cutters.

Was working with another tiler yesterday and he produced a TS50 Plus out of his van. Decided that I'd give it an open mind and use his cutter to see how I found it. Both working in a large bathroom together. Seen the appeal of it and found it easy enough to use but it had a few problems. It seemed to struggle to cut 10mm off a tile. Wasn't sure if it was just me but the fella I was working with had to use the nippers for it too, the Rubi just didn't seem to want to break them cleanly. The other main downfall was that if you were cutting a U shape check, on the sigma you'd scribe the back line, run the other two lines up the wetsaw, and then put the check back on the cutter and break the handle above the scribe to remove the centre piece. Didn't seem to be an option to remove the centre piece on the Rubi because the breaker was fixed to the top - no use if you want to make a break elsewhere on the tile. A decent machine but definately wouldn't have rated it as highly as the sigma. The other tiler who'd swore by Rubi for years even seemed to have a bit of difficulty on stuff where the Sigma wouldn't have had any trouble. Not sure if it was a lower spec cutter or if his just wasn't well serviced so wouldn't base my whole Rubi experience on that one day. Wouldn't snub my nose up at a TS50+ but definately over rated for what it was, in my opinion of course.

Then today, was working with 120x60 porcelain and needed to borrow a cutter which would take the size. Borrowed a Sigma which was the height of me, however this was a Klick Klock style handle which I'd never used before. It was a very capable cutter and had a very good quality feel to it. The klick klock system worked much better than the conventional pull handle breaker would have done in the situation. Thought it would have been a gimmick but it definately gave you more breaking pressure than any other style of cutter I've used. Rated it highly but would only use the Klick Klock system for very heavy/strong tiles, felt it would be rather slow and tedious if you were using it as an every day method.

Overall, still reckon the Sigma pull series have it in the bag. Yet to use a Montolit cutters so shall reserve my judgement on them until the time. From talking to the other tiler about the price of the Rubi gear, the Sigma's seemed considerably cheaper too.
 
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tilereophonics

Yeh I've found my Rubi TS-50 to be a problem when it comes to doing very narrow cuts, I always have to use nippers instead. Very time consuming when it's a 50cm tile.
Also when cutting large tiles, there's not much support on either side, so the tile drops, sometimes making it more difficult to get an accurate line.
Still though, it's a neat little cutter and excellent quality.

Will have to have a look at Sigma cutters, they sound really good.
 
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doug boardley

Good choice mate! I think the size is ideal, can't see many customers wanting tiles bigger than 71cm just now. Hopefully!
ahem, these were 333x 1000:smilewinkgrin:
doug-boardley-albums-sunny-hill-picture2047-being-greedy-these-tiles-1000x-333.jpg
 
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doug boardley

you can see the cut/score, on this pic i was just snapping back, if you let the size of the tile, or the cost, worry you, you will bugger the cut up!!. It's no different to score and snapping a 6" pilky!
 
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well i have used both cutters for years , sigma is a good cutter but they have changed how its made now and the handle wear is poor and it doesnt last long enough anymore
as for the ts50 again a good cutter but the product is now made cheap and under pressure it just fails apart, the nuts that hold it all to gether i have had to replace 3 times and the block exploded on me when it come up against a porcelain tile that was to tough.
I would say at the moment i would rate the tx70 fanstic machine and it will cut out small cuts no problem , but a little bit to heavy,
i still have a tm70 and thats been going for 20 years that is one tough machine unbreakable
 

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