Does anyone here in the Houston area who have built their oven willing to loan or sell their saw used to cut the brick?
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Re: Brick cutting saws
Thanks I did that already. Bought a 4 1/2" angle grinder with a dia cutting wheel. Just thought that a cheap table wet saw would be faster for repetitive cuts.
My neighbor has a small table wet saw for cutting tiles but I think it is too small for the fire bricks. Any thoughts?
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Re: Brick cutting saws
Hey Gdest,
Those small units will cut a brick if you have a few days to spend and a lot of money for diamond blades.. According to their website Harbor Freight has 2 stores in Houston, 17490 HWY 290 10826 NORTH FREEWAY
Try their website, If your not familiar, they come in handy for a lot of things..
This was a favorite tool, I used it to cut 90% of my brick - Harbor Freight Tools - Quality Tools at the Lowest Prices
The thing with them is most of their stuff is always on sale, and you can get coupons for 20% off,, Here's one of their tile saws- Harbor Freight Tools - Quality Tools at the Lowest Prices For the prices on some of the stuff it can be hard to go wrong, You just have to be careful of what you buy, Most of the stuff is decent and some is just plain crap...
Cheers
Mark
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Re: Brick cutting saws
I converted an old, heavy duty radial arm to a brick saw with the addition of a 14" dia blade, bigger homemade guard, pond pump, mortar tub, plastic tubing and a couple of 5 gal buckets...works like a champ and can cut up to 5 inches deep in one pass..
Blade was around $70....the rest was laying around the shop, took around 10 hours of time..
I even chamfered my inner arch with it...
Roger
Trying to learn what I can about flours, fermentation and flames...
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Re: Brick cutting saws
I have access to a commercial 14" wet brick saw but too far away to loan.
the neighbors loved the dust cloud so much that they asked me to stop.
Directing the dust into a cut open 20l square plastic drum is a good start!
If you have access to a good commercial vacuum, will also suck up the majority of dust if it is carefully directed into a chute for the vacuum to collect
Cheers.
NeillPrevention is better than cure, - do it right the first time!
The more I learn, the more I realise how little I know
Neill’s Pompeiii #1
http://www.fornobravo.com/forum/f8/n...-1-a-2005.html
Neill’s kitchen underway
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Re: Brick cutting saws
I used the harbor freight saw. You buy the saw the stand is seperate and also the blade.
As far as cutting brick being a pain in the neck, I agree! Anything you can do to reduce this is a bonus.
One thing that I did that I found helpful is rather than use the tray that comes with the HF saw for your water reserve, I used a 5 gallon bucket and droped the water pump in that. The tray gets filled up very quickly from the brick resdue (This is the fire clay that everyone talks about). Where in West Houston are you?
Gary
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