The guy at "house of tools" said that a few days before I came in there a guy bought one and cut through a 2" X 2" solid square chunk of mild steel..... the customer was very surprized... it went through like butter.Audacity Racing wrote:Nice. I hate plasma cutters and flames personally. If I have to make a part from plate it's milled, routed, or done with a waterjet.
I've never used that specific model, but cutting things like floor pans out is really easy with those, only thing you have to be carful of is that it is far more dangerous ins terms of flying debris and kickback than a plasma or sawzall. Never cut through thick plate though, haha... I figured you would have lost more teeth than that.
The cutter has it's own chip depsosit tray built into inside of the protective blade guard (which is metal).... so most of the mess gets contained inside.
The wierd thing is that the material doesn't get that hot.... the very first piece I cut was actually still cold..... near the end after cutting about 25" of 1/2" material in total.... the blade was a little duller than when I started.... so the material warmed up a bit..... still... I could handle it without gloves.... way colder than a normal cutoff saw.
I only chipped the teeth on the very first cut..... after that.... no more chips.
I really didn't believe that this was going to work..... especially because it was a "dry" cut...... but I'm glad to be proven wrong.... it's a great tool
I'd really like a CNC laser etching / cutting machine..... but.... I have more important things to spend money on.... ( I just bought my wife a brand new Mazda CX7 with the Mazdaspeed 2.3L Direct injection turbo.... which is a hell of an engine..... rumor is that a 450whp turbo upgrade kit will be coming out soon from a major tuning company )
If I spend a bunch of money on my wife's vehicle she won't complain that I have eight cars