squelchtone wrote:MrAngry wrote:
Are you trolling?
averagejoe is a good member of this community, he wouldn't pull your leg or lead you down the wrong path.
What worked well for him, may not work well for you and vise versa. Chalk this up to the old forum signature line "your mileage may vary"
Squelchtone
Thanks for sticking up Squelchtone.
I recommended a cutter since they work well and do not wear out (if they ever do) at the rate of wheel/discs etc.
Of course the discs work faster, and they do have their place when they work better for certain things. You can just go and cut along the lines so to speak. BUT they wear out fairly quickly, and generate LOTS of heat. You have to quench it the workpiece every few seconds. Using a TC cutter I can go for minutes sometimes and it will not get too hot. I have used lots of discs, but still am on my original cutter.
Another point of this would be the quality of what you buy. If you but the stuff that China ships over here because it is so bad they wont use it themselves, you wont get the expected results. This is where you really get what you pay for.
Take for instance when I was fitting an Abloy protec KIK into my S&G 833c padlock. I needed to cut down a hardened steel bolt to make the correct tailpiece. Using a wheel to cut off the bolt was fine, but shaving off material is where the carbide bits shone. They literally made the steel shavings fly and gave a smoother finish to the final piece. I tried with discs but got fed up after using 4 of them just to take the corners off of the bolt head.