
Renee S
Moderators: Brad Walker, Tony Smith
ron, you've got the same link in there twice - which one is the induction motor type?dee wrote:A new tile saw design that is in the mid price range is something like this;
http://www.mkdiamond.com/tile/pages/170/170_1.html#
The motor on these units is still the "universal" design and will be noisy, but it should be a little more druable than the low end nuits. These units are not very big, looks can be deceiving.
This link shows what could be the most durable of the tile saw designs;
http://www.mkdiamond.com/tile/pages/100/100_1.html#
More money. but built to last for a number of years under heavy use. The motors on this type saw are "induction" motors, not the "universal" type and are very quiet.
Look around and check prices and features and accessories. To help determine which motor type a particular saw has, ask if the motor has "brushes". If it does, it's a "universal" type motor and noisy. If the salesman doesn't know, find a different salesman.
Ron
hmmmm this one is supposed to be quiet according to their info....Ron Coleman wrote:Good observation Dee, the 660 has a universal motor too. Just about all the "built in" motors are the universal type.
Universal motors are good for lots of power in a small package because they run at very high speed. The price to pay is noise, both from the high speed motor and the gears used to reduce the speed to something usable.
Ron
uhm, is this unfused sheets? wouldn't hand cutting with a morton system or strip cutter work better?dblood wrote:I'm looking to do lots of production cutting of 1/8" glass, all straight cuts. I tried a cheap tile saw from Home Depot, but it chipped the edges too much and the blade is thick so it creates a lot of rough grit that gets in the way. I'm thinking of trying a lapidary slab saw because they come with really thin blades (in the area of 0.02"), and I assume they are smooth-cutting. Any opinions on this?