R
Rob Z
Guest
Tom at Tool-home.com convinced me ;D that I couldn't live without the Deltex, so we recently bought one and just put it to work today.
This probably wasn't what Festool had in mind for this tool....we are installing travertine in a bathroom, and have a lot of cuts around obstructions, inside corners, etc. This travertine is very soft and fragile (heavily laden with veins) and breaks when using standard tools for cutting and shaping stone. So we ended up cutting a lot of pieces close with the tile saw, then using the diamond bit on the Roto Zip, and then using the Deltex to bring the cut to perfection and chamfering the cut edges to match the factory edge.
With what this stone cost per piece, and the number of pieces we were able to cut without breaking them...I feel like the tool is going to pay for itself on the first job.
Very smooth, low vibration, easy to handle and get into corners.
This probably wasn't what Festool had in mind for this tool....we are installing travertine in a bathroom, and have a lot of cuts around obstructions, inside corners, etc. This travertine is very soft and fragile (heavily laden with veins) and breaks when using standard tools for cutting and shaping stone. So we ended up cutting a lot of pieces close with the tile saw, then using the diamond bit on the Roto Zip, and then using the Deltex to bring the cut to perfection and chamfering the cut edges to match the factory edge.
With what this stone cost per piece, and the number of pieces we were able to cut without breaking them...I feel like the tool is going to pay for itself on the first job.
Very smooth, low vibration, easy to handle and get into corners.