This worked great for redoing the shower/bathtub of my kid's bathroom. ru-vid.comUgkxfiuHoZJo3bgdVPFRxQ-iqPpfbEHl2cYt I didn't like the guide, so I took it off. I just used a fine tipped sharpie on the tile and followed that line. It does make a wet mess, and once I started looking like I wet myself I started wearing a towel and apron while cutting. The blade it came with worked great until we wore it out. It was better than the replacement one we bought. I tried looking for just their blade, but failed. Not really for larger tiles unless you stack stuff on either side to support the tiles. Anyway, would definitley buy again.
Loved the video. I'm bout to start a bathroom remodel and I was gone tile the shower floor and walls. Also the bathroom floor. 1st time doing it myself, so this was very helpful. 👍🏿👌🏿
If it's your first time remodeling a bathroom, do yourself a HUGE favor and do a proper waterproofing on the shower. Either a liquid membrane or a foam system. There's plenty of options available for you to choose from. Any questions, let me know. I do a few bathroom remodels a month. Doesn't matter how great the tile looks at the end of it's gonna all fall down in a year because it wasn't properly waterproofed
I'm SO glad that that angled cut didn't work out perfectly. For all that the cutter companies want us to believe, cutting tile is not an exact science. Experience helps but there are always times when you end up trimming and polishing imperfect cuts. Spending $1k on a cutting machine definitely helps up the odds of better cuts but it won't bring you 100% success, especially with the extremely hard porcelain tiles around today...imho ;)
Hi thank you for all your videos they are great I'm in the construction field for 2 years and I'm thinking seriously to get in the tile business would you mind telling where can I get a good deal for this tile cutter thanks appreciate your help
Thank you for the video. I purchased the 93p5 also. I however think that it is not adjusted squarely. The cuts are slightly off. Any recommendations on squaring it up? I tried using a framing square but I don't think that worked well.
Have you (on anyone else here) used score and snap cutters on 3D tile? I have some bathroom remodels on the horizon and I’m trying to decide if a snap cutter will be adequate for me. I think it will do all the tile I’m looking at except possibly some 3D ceramic.
Hi I’ve visited your website many times, but it’s not clear where to sign up for the courses? Do I need to buy each individual course separately or do you offer a one-time fee? I remember in older videos you advertised it was $99.00 for access to all. Love your videos! You’re a fantastic teacher!
Thank you, I really appreciate your kindness. You can view all my courses via this link homerepairtutor.com/course-offerings/ I have several different options because everyone is doing something a bit different. So you can choose the course that best fits your project
I’m trying to figure out if my space is appropriate for a curbless build? So I didn’t know if you address that in any of your videos. Then at that point I can decide to buy your videos for curbed or curbless.
@@HomeRepairTutor well I don’t have a floor plan of the current bath, but it is a 7’ x 13’ space with a the current tub/shower unit to the immediate right as I walk thru a 30” door. I can send you a quick photo? I’m do want to buy your courses and I will but I wasn’t sure which one to buy? Of course, I thought you already had the curbless course published already.
just curious what you use that milwaukee ammo can box for? i have a couple - one for trowels (vertical) and another for measurement and layout tools. couldn't fit my grinder though without wasting space
I love that box for blades, diamond hole saws, spacers, and anything tile related. It’s awesome to just grab it and know all my blades are in there 🙌🏼🔥🙌🏼🔥
@@HomeRepairTutor that’s funny you say that as what I ended up doing is putting my two grinders in a deep organizer across and used the four smaller sections in the deep organizer for blades/grinder accessories. Liked it so much I ended up getting another for various spacers/wedges
@@shettlock that’s a great idea!! I might do that as well, I really like Milwaukee’s new adjustable speed grinder, the 2888-20, because you can use it to cut and polish!! But having two grinders is nice for efficiency
thank you, the P5 will be available in the summer, I’d look at distributors like tools4flooring.com instead of Amazon, where there could be knock-offs. But the P5 is definitely awesome 👍🏼🔥👍🏼🔥
Sent mine back first day of using it and got a wet saw. Now i don't waste a single tile and don't have to clean the edges. I turn the tile upside down and put it through the machine, comes out perfect every time! I'd NEVER go back to a manual. Imagine if you get a cut wrong on one of these, that's the whole tile gone, what a waste! Fine if you are under the line but if you are not, no grinder is going to add a piece is it. I'm glad i bought this, cause i may never had realised that wet saw's are just bad ass and cuts your time in half! Also, people need to remember, which this guy is not even telling people. These models get worse as you go down in size. Less features and more issues. This is obviously a sponsored review. This is why i don't trust Amazon vine reviews. People fabricate to get paid.
Because you are doing two jobs instead of one. Work smarter not harder. I swear some people just enjoy wasting time. Go and use both manual and wet saw then come back to me and let me know how many tiles you saved.
hum, clearly not a professional. Still an ok video. But you didn't mention a lot of key factors on a straight tile cutter. Like the brake in front of the wheel blade which blocks the view of the mark (cut). And didn't show close-up images that would allow people to actually evaluate the cut. That far-away image is pretty much useless for us tile guys to understand this cutter. The way you turned the grinder away from you also shows that. A tile guy won't waste a second with that. We're just too used to grinders. Also hitting the edge of the tile on the wrong angle which tends to chip the tile... so many details. Things that we don't mention, but are key to getting good fishing and working fast.
Sent mine back first day of using it and got a wet saw. Now i don't waste a single tile and don't have to clean the edges. I turn the tile upside down and put it through the machine, comes out perfect every time! I'd NEVER go back to a manual. Imagine if you get a cut wrong on one of these, that's the whole tile gone, what a waste! Sponsored review. This is why i don't trust Amazon vine reviews. People fabricate to get paid.
@@moovintruespace994 I’m not paid by Montolit or anyone else. I like the manual cutter for certain tiles. And I’ll use saws for other tiles. It’s just a preference based on the results I want to give my clients.
No professional tile setter uses a wetsaw for every single cut they make, it would take way too long for every project... the monolit is fantastic and makes cuts look great. I wish I had the time and money to use a wetsaw on every single cut. Commercial work and even home remodels need a dry cutter and grinders.
We have 3 four man crews, 4 wet saws and 8 dry cutters, sigma, monolit and rubi. Working in the Madison,WI area and also Milwaukee. Could never keep up with just a wetsaw.
They make smaller sizes that are less money, but if you’re cutting a variety of tiles this is a great option that’ll save you money by not ruining tile