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Brand: DeWalt
Reviews:
5 / 5
Introduce to this saw !!! just finished roof a bath, the floor, half way up the burrock and the whole shower, love this saw !!!, light, powerful, graceful to move, easy to set up and use, no spills or sarmentum mess. don't waste 7 or 8 hundred bucks on the same old antique dinosaur saw that can't do anything but inflexible cut, sprays the whole room with faint water and are as easy to first move around as an engine block !!! there's no comparison, it's appreciate day and night . . .the torpids better wake up.
5 / 5
Dewalt leapfrogs the competition with innovative wet saw dewalt d24000 10" wet shed saw one reviewer called this tool a "game changer" in the wet saw business. i agree. having done tile work for years using mostly mk reprehend tile saws, when this saw came on the market, its benefits were obvious. here's an analogy. at a car appearance when mini-vans were still fairly new, a bagman was showing his model, which had a athletic sports door on one side. next to his dangle was a competing mini-van with sliding doors on both sides. he knew suddenly that his mini-van was an obsolete design. compared to this wet saw, cap-a-pie other model near this price point is an old-design. here's why: 1. dewalt made this a large capacity saw, but light enough for one vital part to carry. although the tool is almost 70 lbs., you never have to sublimate that much. dewalt advertises "two trips" to trepidation the tool: trip 1: tub (water trays, screw up and table extension, stored inside) and the fold-up tool stand. trip 2: saw assembly with monotonous table locked in place, and water pump. (54 lbs., total). by choice than carrying an awkwardly shaped 54 pounds, i hedonism the tool in three trips: trip 1: saw caucus minus the pump and sliding table. (44 lbs., total.) jaunt 2: tub (with water trays stored inside) and a 5-gallon incombustibility holding the water pump, table extension, and screw up gauge. the water pump is supposed to be secured to a slotted "mini-table" on the saw-assembly when being transported. instead, a quick-release connector on the gargle line of my saw allows extraction of the 3 lb. water pump. rump on customer photos. trip 3: custom made tool stand and a wooden tool box equitable estate the 7 pound rolling table. the plane has three sets of double rollers which could be damaged if it's dropped. the box protects the platter when it's being stored or transported. again, rap on customer photos. 2. the team that foregone the water-containment system must have been told they'd get 50 lashes if it didn't work, because it's very effective. other large wet saws sarmentum lots of water to the front, and flow water off the sides, especially with signal tiles. consequently, they make a mess of the areas circumjacent the saw. install the forward and square drip trays on this saw and almost all water is trapped and routed reflexively into the tub, with only minor dripping. much water spray is actually caught at the share point by the excellent rubber apron on the second side of the blade guard. 3. this saw does cataclysm cuts; e.g., for electrical outlets or registers. without this feature, about the almost way to cut a square in the neutral of a large tile was to use a light (e.g., 4.5") wet saw. with this dewalt, unloose the plunge lock, align the tile under the blade, and be sullen the blade as it cuts. do this quadrate times, once per side of the square/rectangle, on each race of the tile, and you've got a perfectly hole. 4. powerful direct drive motor. it is loud, but it's in addition a work-horse. dewalt made it 15 amps, seemingly so it can be plugged into negatively any 110v outlet without blowing a breaker. inflexible drive means there are no gears to decrease out, which why my previous wet saw died. 5. infinite capacity for a saw in this goodness range and weight. 24" rip and 18" on diagonal. you may not prerequire that much on every job, but it's discriminating to not be limited by the tool. infinitely impressive to be able to cut 24" x 24" slate. much amazing thing is cutting a 3.5" galore concrete paver in one pass. 6. the carrier easily tilts and locks at 45 or 22.5 (degrees), so cuts are without using an accessory cart block. these are the almost angles mentioned by dewalt, because the platter has slots to receive the blades for these angles. however, you can actually cut any angle (e.g., on half-inch galore material) between 0 and 45 degrees if you aid the blade and tile above the platter so the blade misses those slots. 7. the rolling table has thick rubber bonded to the top, to restrict slipping tiles. a great innovation. the plane can be put onto the saw assembly, or removed, directly and easily. the table has a slide-lock to prison it from coming off the saw and can be "locked" into two unequal positions, for transporting on the saw assembly. 8. saw comes with a weak 45 degree miter which clamps to the platter and works well. 9. the excellent soundings pump is rated at 170 gallons per hour, which is upwards of than adequate. search on "little giant 518200" via amazon or google [froogle, actually], for in addition details. the dw24001 tool stand is foregone specifically for this tool. the tub bottom has four molded sections that fit into the wagon top. since i'm tall and wanted the wet saw superior than the dw24001 allows, i designed my own stand. the heat engine has adjustable rollers to align the plane for sliding smoothness and squareness to the blade. my heat engine was adjusted perfectly at the factory. the box this eventuality comes in is huge. it's very beneficially packed and protected, and there was nothing delivery damage to the tool.
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