Both of them have a plastic tube that feeds the blade with a continuous stream of water to keep the dust under control.
Wet saw to cut ceramic tile.
A basin of water below the blade keeps the tile and blade cool while the cutting takes place.
The second one is the ideal tool to cut an installed tile even just a portion of it.
Though this process can be tedious if you are cutting many tiles for single tiles it gets the job done.
Rail saw is used for cutting large tiles.
In saws with a blade that lowers.
Lower the wheel onto the work piece allowing the tile to be cut from the center of the material.
Not completely through it.
Plunge cuts are necessary when making space for vents outlets drains or any other protrusions through the tile surface.
This handheld wet tile saw uses a 12 foot plastic tube to keep a continuous stream of water on the blade as it cuts through tile material.
Make a plunge cut with a wet saw by positioning the material glazed side down directly underneath the cutting wheel.
A wet saw comes with a diamond or carbon blade specifically made to cut tiles.
This model can execute 40 rip cut plus can do 46 rip cut with plunge cut.
A tile wet saw consists of a blade covered in tiny diamonds which spins fast enough to cut through tile.
Durable and professional grade tile saw is easy to assemble and transport.
For simple straight cuts you can always opt for a carbide tipped pen.
Fill the reservoir under the platform of a diamond blade wet saw with water.
A wet tile saw cuts tiles made of ceramic and porcelain leaving a clean smooth edge.
However you might as well come across certain situations where you need to weigh the pros and cons and use a wet saw for cutting a porcelain tile.
As mentioned owning a wet saw is not economically feasible.
For extremely hard or dense tiles a tile wet saw can speed up the cutting process.
Adjust the saw to cut to a depth of 1 8 inch into the tile.
This saw can also cut 28 diagonally and 33 with plunge cut.