Joined
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117 Posts
Hi I believe is my first post here and I believe I landed on this forums while back when I was searching for a descent tile saw that will meet all my expectations,that was somewhat 3 years a go.
Was looking into something that was more easy to work with,lighter,portable,have good accurate railings etc etc,but sadly enough with all those features none of those saws came with the famous "Baldor belt driven motor"
Any ways I've been using lots of saws(MK101,Felker iven tried the Chichago one jesus!!!) during my time as tile guy mainly and currently since things slowed down we got more into remodeling,wood floors ,laminate and we are quite as maculate in our wood work as in our tile work ,so to make long story short I took the plunge for the very first model Ridgid tile saw 3 years a go or so and never looked back.This forum helped me to take the plunge and I'm gratefull for that cause I landed on one at HD for $499 that was on sale....
I wish that back then Peral Abrasive were making the saw that they have today available,light,portable,small,amazingly accurate with the railings,Belt driven engine(big question if its Baldor?) I would of fall for that one.
But by no means I regret buying the Ridgid.Still using the ridgid and iven though I can freely say I'm a pro tile guy I never take my wetsaw on tile job the very first day,its madness if someone needs to use the wetsaw every day except the job requires to do so specially if working with stone.
No I'm not talking smack or I'm your typical newbie tiler and here is why:
-10years as a tile installer and laid over 100.000 sqft tile
-I've worked from comercial big schools,hospitals,universities to custom stone jobs such as the house in Tampa of the Yankee owner (god rest his soul).
-i'm not your regular tile guy,I did mud prep by pulling screets from 5000 sqft. kitchens to the smallest gang showers at 400sqft with 8 + drains etc etc etc
-cant count how many sqft I did stone the old fashion way mudjob all at level.
anyways 3 years a go before I took the plunge for the Ridgid wet saw I saw also a lot of negative talk about it from people have never tried it.
To all that ever consider buying the Ridgid wet saw and hesitate,do not you will love it,and your back will love it too.That saw is 3 year old and still running strong.
I have never personally tried to run 3-4 pieces of lime stone at the same time to test it strength,but I did try with 3 pieces of strong marble,and the saw ate them up,I did used good blade though MK Hot Dog.
I'm gonna show you only some pics what I did with the Ridgid,and in some of them required cutting stone different sizes because some of my customers were too cheap to buy the full packadge of Franch pattern...
here is what the Ridgid can do,and is still doing it:notworthy
Well there is plenty more,but I believe I made my point.
Oh yes and Hi to all,i'm practically new since must be my first post
arty:....
Was looking into something that was more easy to work with,lighter,portable,have good accurate railings etc etc,but sadly enough with all those features none of those saws came with the famous "Baldor belt driven motor"
Any ways I've been using lots of saws(MK101,Felker iven tried the Chichago one jesus!!!) during my time as tile guy mainly and currently since things slowed down we got more into remodeling,wood floors ,laminate and we are quite as maculate in our wood work as in our tile work ,so to make long story short I took the plunge for the very first model Ridgid tile saw 3 years a go or so and never looked back.This forum helped me to take the plunge and I'm gratefull for that cause I landed on one at HD for $499 that was on sale....
I wish that back then Peral Abrasive were making the saw that they have today available,light,portable,small,amazingly accurate with the railings,Belt driven engine(big question if its Baldor?) I would of fall for that one.
But by no means I regret buying the Ridgid.Still using the ridgid and iven though I can freely say I'm a pro tile guy I never take my wetsaw on tile job the very first day,its madness if someone needs to use the wetsaw every day except the job requires to do so specially if working with stone.
No I'm not talking smack or I'm your typical newbie tiler and here is why:
-10years as a tile installer and laid over 100.000 sqft tile
-I've worked from comercial big schools,hospitals,universities to custom stone jobs such as the house in Tampa of the Yankee owner (god rest his soul).
-i'm not your regular tile guy,I did mud prep by pulling screets from 5000 sqft. kitchens to the smallest gang showers at 400sqft with 8 + drains etc etc etc
-cant count how many sqft I did stone the old fashion way mudjob all at level.
anyways 3 years a go before I took the plunge for the Ridgid wet saw I saw also a lot of negative talk about it from people have never tried it.
To all that ever consider buying the Ridgid wet saw and hesitate,do not you will love it,and your back will love it too.That saw is 3 year old and still running strong.
I have never personally tried to run 3-4 pieces of lime stone at the same time to test it strength,but I did try with 3 pieces of strong marble,and the saw ate them up,I did used good blade though MK Hot Dog.
I'm gonna show you only some pics what I did with the Ridgid,and in some of them required cutting stone different sizes because some of my customers were too cheap to buy the full packadge of Franch pattern...
here is what the Ridgid can do,and is still doing it:notworthy
Well there is plenty more,but I believe I made my point.
Oh yes and Hi to all,i'm practically new since must be my first post
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