In anticipation of an upcoming job that I need to scribe a 10lf reclaimed mantle to a river rock wall, I ordered a Ras115 early this week. It arrived 2 days ago. Yesterday, I received a frantic call from one of the design shops I regularly install cabinets for.
It seems that the "other" cabinet installer was not very careful in setting the base cabinets in the main kitchen. It was a U shaped run about 15 lf x 10 lf x 6 lf. All continuous granite tops. The elevation varied by well over 3/8", with dips and valley's throughout the run. And the stone setters were there to install!!!!
Usually in a case like this I would either take out and reset some cabinets, shim some, and sand the tops of others with a belt sander. Probably take the better part of a day, and make a huge mess... I pulled out the new toy.
Keep in mind that I have never touched this machine, and I had an audience: The general contractor, the design shop production manager, the designer, and 2-3 granite guys. A bit of pressure!
Set up the laser, marked the high spots with a black sharpie, loaded a 36 grit on the tool, and had at it. Less than an hour later, the stone guys were setting tops, and I was the hero that saved the day. It really was a very short learning curve.
I should have purchased this tool years ago.
Dan
It seems that the "other" cabinet installer was not very careful in setting the base cabinets in the main kitchen. It was a U shaped run about 15 lf x 10 lf x 6 lf. All continuous granite tops. The elevation varied by well over 3/8", with dips and valley's throughout the run. And the stone setters were there to install!!!!
Usually in a case like this I would either take out and reset some cabinets, shim some, and sand the tops of others with a belt sander. Probably take the better part of a day, and make a huge mess... I pulled out the new toy.
Keep in mind that I have never touched this machine, and I had an audience: The general contractor, the design shop production manager, the designer, and 2-3 granite guys. A bit of pressure!
Set up the laser, marked the high spots with a black sharpie, loaded a 36 grit on the tool, and had at it. Less than an hour later, the stone guys were setting tops, and I was the hero that saved the day. It really was a very short learning curve.
I should have purchased this tool years ago.
Dan