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Cutting Porcelain tiles in the
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Hello all, I'm about to tile my bathroom with 670mm by 350mm glazed ( smooth) porcelain tiles.
Just deciding on which type of tile cutter to go for.
Was thinking ... -
TilersForums Contributor
Cutting Porcelain tiles
Hello all, I'm about to tile my bathroom with 670mm by 350mm glazed ( smooth) porcelain tiles.
Just deciding on which type of tile cutter to go for.
Was thinking about the following cutters:
1- QEP/Vitrex manual pro700 cutter which comes with a 22mm titanium coated tungsten carbide 22mm wheel.
2- Vitrex Versitile power pro 900 Diamond wet saw.
Has anyone had any experience with any of the above?
I am more inclined towards the manual cutter, as the tiles are smooth, but having said that I'm not sure if the carbide scoring wheel can cut the tiles.
Any guidance appreciated.
Many thanks
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New TilersForums Contributor
Re: Cutting Porcelain tiles
hi a big sigma cutter will scribe and snap them nice with no problems at all been in the industry for 29 years hope this helps cheers
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Re: Cutting Porcelain tiles
vitrex for porcelain
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New TilersForums Contributor
Re: Cutting Porcelain tiles
sigms cuttiers only work on scribe n snap what i use for nonn straight cuts is a dewalt grinder with a good porcelain blade the reason i use dewalt is they tend to have more rpm which means the grinder runs alot quicker than most grinders as inturn cut nicer and on the scribed edge of tile a bit of wet and dry will fix the edge i have big wet saws but with porc u rarely need anything else ihope this has helped u good luck most of all dont panic cheers
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The Following User Says Thank You to marty the tiler For This Useful Post:
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Re: Cutting Porcelain tiles
Is this a job you are doing for yourself?
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Re: Cutting Porcelain tiles
I've a wide range of cutters and my first thoughts for a smooth straight accurate cut with porcelain would be to try the tile on a manual Rubi TX700n
Kev
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Healthy TilersForums Contributor
Re: Cutting Porcelain tiles
Hi AP
I have both the 750 and the 900, firstly the vitrex 750, I changed the blade to a marcrist and have cut 10mm porcelain with it. Nice saw for under £100. The arber on the 750 is reversable 19mm or 22mm, I tend to use this one a lot more than the 900.
The Vitrex 900 is very heavy (proberbly the reason I tend to leave it in the garage)
the arber on the 900 is 22mm I did change the blade to a marcrist as well, to do so requires a 25.4 to 22mm ruducing shime ( If you check the other Vitrex thread there is a link on where to buy one)
I did have a problem of chiping on the off cut of tile, but was informed by one the other members on here that it was proberbly the fence being out of square to the blade.
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The Following User Says Thank You to richard Kent For This Useful Post:
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Re: Cutting Porcelain tiles
Rubi TX is good for porcelain, you can hire one from CTD
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TilersForums Contributor
Re: Cutting Porcelain tiles

Originally Posted by
Scottley
Is this a job you are doing for yourself?
Yes, just completed a total renovation of my Bathroom, including a wet floor, ready for tiling.
I'm just on the look out for a decent porcelain dry cutter, Sigma is well out of my reach!
I initially thought to go for the Vitrex 700, but having email vitrex, the've advised me to go for their wet cutter instead, cos its better at cutting porcelain. I'm not too sure...
changing the vitrex blade to marcrist is a handy tip.
My tiles are 12mm thick, and now trying to stretch the budget and considering the rubi tx-700-N or a Montolit Masterpiuma 75. I want to the job properly, and I have read a lot of different opinions on which tile cutter is good.
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TilersForums Contributor
Re: Cutting Porcelain tiles

Originally Posted by
richard Kent
Hi AP
I have both the 750 and the 900, firstly the vitrex 750, I changed the blade to a marcrist and have cut 10mm porcelain with it. Nice saw for under £100. The arber on the 750 is reversable 19mm or 22mm, I tend to use this one a lot more than the 900.
The Vitrex 900 is very heavy (proberbly the reason I tend to leave it in the garage)
the arber on the 900 is 22mm I did change the blade to a marcrist as well, to do so requires a 25.4 to 22mm ruducing shime ( If you check the other Vitrex thread there is a link on where to buy one)
I did have a problem of chiping on the off cut of tile, but was informed by one the other members on here that it was proberbly the fence being out of square to the blade.
Thanks for the tip Richard. I wasn't so sure it would live upto cutting 12mm porcelains, so thinking of biting the bullet an invest in tx-700n or Monty 75. I will see it as an investment as it will come to use again in the future with more projects.
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Re: Cutting Porcelain tiles
What adhesive are you thinking of using, are these tiles straight onto plasterboard?
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TilersForums Contributor
Re: Cutting Porcelain tiles

Originally Posted by
diamondtiling
What adhesive are you thinking of using, are these tiles straight onto plasterboard?

Hi Diamond,
I'm going to be using Mapei keraquick rapid set flexible tile adhesive, and the tiles will be going onto Marmox waterproof boards. Ive practically covered the entire walls, ceiling & floor of the bathoom with marmox, reinforced all board joins with grp tape and also tanked all joins with mapei wps tanking membrane.
had plasterboard before renovation, and it was damp in places especially behind the shower wall, so decided to opt for marmox. Definetely worth it IMO.
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The Following User Says Thank You to richard Kent For This Useful Post:
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Re: Cutting Porcelain tiles
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New TilersForums Contributor
Re: Cutting Porcelain tiles

Originally Posted by
richard Kent
If you want the Vitrex, Rubi or Monty try Trade tiler his prices are very reasonable,
also both the 750 and the 900 will throw water every where, as one of my customers once said. you have tiler's crotch, meaning very damp nether region

tilers crotch luv the comment well said
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Re: Cutting Porcelain tiles

Originally Posted by
richard Kent
If you want the Vitrex, Rubi or Monty try Trade tiler his prices are very reasonable,
also both the 750 and the 900 will throw water every where, as one of my customers once said. you have tiler's crotch, meaning very damp nether region

always wear dark trousers
other wise it looks like youv'e been cought short
andy-allen-tiling
Wall and Floor Tiler based in Gloucester and covering Cheltenham-Forest of Dean-Stroud-Tewksbury-The Cotswolds.
Full bathroom fitting service, including all plumbing, plastering, and electrical installations, Free advice and design. tel.........01452 721112 mobile...07976883412 web site..... www.andy-allen-tiling.co.uk ANY TILE-ANY SURFACE-ANYWHERE
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Re: Cutting Porcelain tiles
I've never used Vitrex cutters before but swear by my Rubi TX700N, unarguably the best dry cutter on the market in that size group
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The Following User Says Thank You to diamondtiling For This Useful Post:
merlecollins (04-07-2010)
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The Following User Says Thank You to merlecollins For This Useful Post:
diamondtiling (04-07-2010)
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Re: Cutting Porcelain tiles
I had a vitrex once and it died after a year,also not sure about the manufacturers warantees etc with these cheeper brands,cant go wrong with dewalt,rubi
"Quality means doing it right when no one is looking"
.”Henry Ford''
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Re: Cutting Porcelain tiles

Originally Posted by
richard Kent
If you want the Vitrex, Rubi or Monty try Trade tiler his prices are very reasonable,
also both the 750 and the 900 will throw water every where, as one of my customers once said. you have tiler's crotch, meaning very damp nether region

Dude, you dont need to fill it up with water! 
I have the 750 and it works a treat! Cuts ceramic, porcelain, stone etc with no hassle. Im not sure how long the blade will last, and Im sure there are better cutters out there, but if you wanted to buy it, it works just fine.
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Re: Cutting Porcelain tiles

Originally Posted by
merlecollins
I've never used Vitrex cutters before but
swear by my Rubi TX700N, unarguably the best dry cutter on the market in that size group

I have a tx1200 and swear at it all the time , i hate the bloody thing...
Last edited by andy-p; 04-07-2010 at 10:42 AM.
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TilersForums Contributor
Re: Cutting Porcelain tiles

Originally Posted by
Dave
where abouts are you..?
I'm in London Dave.
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TilersForums Contributor
Re: Cutting Porcelain tiles
I did have a problem of chiping on the off cut of tile, but was informed by one the other members on here that it was proberbly the fence being out of square to the blade.
Richard, did you have this problem on the 750 or 900? I've heard one way of preventing chipping is to turn the tile on its back, slice a notch into it, flip it back upright and start the cut from the opposite side. This then allows the blade to exit via the notch preventing chipping.
Your tip on using the 750 & changing to a marcrist blade has now got me thinking again..... are u getting clean straight cuts with that set up?
Regards
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Healthy TilersForums Contributor
Re: Cutting Porcelain tiles
Ap
The chipping problem was with the 900 and as I haven't really used the 900 for a few months now and I haven't tried to solve the problem, IE re-align the fence with the blade.
I have heard of the this problem with other 900 users so I think it might be a common problem and hopefully easy to solve by re-aligning the fence.
The biggest tile I have cut with the 750 is 450sq. I do tend to dry cut if I can and only wet cut when I need to.
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The Following User Says Thank You to richard Kent For This Useful Post:
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Re: Cutting Porcelain tiles
I tuck an old tea towel in the front of my top for wet cutting and it hangs far enough to stop the embarrasing damp spot
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Re: Cutting Porcelain tiles
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