Moderator: 3ne2nr Mods
hindian wrote:Fellas I'm looking for something to clean tarnished brass aside from from Autosol or Brasso. Any suggestions? The items to clean are very intricate so I looking for something that I might be able to soak them in thanks.
pugboy wrote:looking for a plumber with approriate size snake cleaner, around 4-6"
house has gully type drain to sewer and draining kinda slow with kitchen oil/fat etc blocking it up.
Simple job actually, just to pull out grate and run snake.
Same thing I seeing that's why I'm in this dilemma.I was going for the Milwaukee but then I saw the Makita deal and price and was like Makita is a good brand tooStrugglerzinc wrote:I can tell you the Milwaukee takes an absolute beating and still runs. I see some of them fabricators abuse them to no end and them Milwaukee still happily running.
I have the Milwaukee and it gets a fair amount of work. Blade choice for me is the De Walt 14" cuz I find it cuts way better with less downward pressure. If a blade does get glazed with me I have a method to fix that. A chopsaw is probably the most abused tool in a fabrication shop lolpugboy wrote:either will work
most times fellas don’t know how to use the chopsaw, you gotta have even pressure and know not to force it, also sometime the blade will get glazed and not cut.
supercharged turbo wrote:I bought the Milwaukee chopsaw.I checked both items in the store and the Makita was feeling ah lil on the cheaper side compared to the Milwaukee.Also,the sales rep recommended the Milwaukee as it has a 5 year warranty and is more for heavy duty jobs.
pugboy wrote:good
get the dewalt blades, or use the supplied crap blade for only small items straight cut.
also weld up a little wheeled stand so you can push it around the floor.
mine is a real heavy model so that helps a lot.supercharged turbo wrote:I bought the Milwaukee chopsaw.I checked both items in the store and the Makita was feeling ah lil on the cheaper side compared to the Milwaukee.Also,the sales rep recommended the Milwaukee as it has a 5 year warranty and is more for heavy duty jobs.
Return to “Ole talk and more Ole talk”
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 303 guests