sr

"steve robinson"

15/07/2005 8:44 PM

corian

what's the best way to cut corian

thanks

steve


This topic has 4 replies

Kk

"Ken"

in reply to "steve robinson" on 15/07/2005 8:44 PM

16/07/2005 3:26 PM

Use a diamond 40 grit abrasive blade, if you plan on cutting alot, carbide
will dull fast, but will do a fairly good job, for edging use a good
carbide bit, Whiteside or Amana. most others will chip over time.
I am a certified fabricator, I cut a lot of Solid Surface.

Ken


"steve robinson" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> what's the best way to cut corian
>
> thanks
>
> steve
>

b

in reply to "steve robinson" on 15/07/2005 8:44 PM

15/07/2005 2:42 PM

On Fri, 15 Jul 2005 20:44:17 GMT, "steve robinson"
<[email protected]> wrote:

>what's the best way to cut corian
>
>thanks
>
>steve
>
with a subcontractor. preferably an insured one...

wt

"woodstuff"

in reply to "steve robinson" on 15/07/2005 8:44 PM

16/07/2005 10:09 PM

"Ken" wrote in message:
> Use a diamond 40 grit abrasive blade, if you plan on cutting alot,
carbide
> will dull fast, but will do a fairly good job, for edging use a good
> carbide bit, Whiteside or Amana. most others will chip over time.
> I am a certified fabricator, I cut a lot of Solid Surface.
> Ken
>
I would like to know more about the 40-grit abrasive blades you mentioned.
I am
also certified, but that means little, since I haven't worked it much. I
was told to use
a solid-surface blade or one with 0-degree hook (which works fairly well).
I was also
told to use a 3 horse router, but my 1.5 PCs works pretty well if I have
sharp bits.
Would appreciate some input on the abrasive blades. Thanks.

woodstuff [email protected]

st

"skip tracer"

in reply to "steve robinson" on 15/07/2005 8:44 PM

15/07/2005 7:24 PM

carbide blades and bits


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