Looking for someone can cut a small piece of steel. 2" x 1"
Too big to cut.
Brampton. Mississauga area.
Thanks.
Too big to cut.
Brampton. Mississauga area.
Thanks.
Or metal blade in some type of reciprocating saw or grinder with a zip disc. All not ideal but the cut would be done faster than the drive to better equipment.That said 2"x1" sounds like hack saw country.
What's the problem with a cheap 4.5" angle grinder? Almost an order of magnitude cheaper than the options you are considering.Does anyone have a favorite reasonably compact cutting tool that they'd recommend? Not for something as big as the OP's hitch extension thing, but 1.5 inch angle iron, 1/8" or 1/4" flat steel or aluminum stock, threaded rod, etc.
I've already bought into the Milwaukee M12 system and the M12 hackzall is okay on softer stuff, but it's not great on steel. I was originally thinking of something in between a Dremel and an angle grinder. The M12 cut off tool fits that niche, but it appears to be intended for thin sheet metal like ductwork, flashing and gutters, and a lot of reviews complain about it stalling in anything heavier.
Now I'm thinking maybe something like a 7.25" chop saw would be better? Way more powerful, but still small and light enough to store on a shelf.
I've got one, but it's never gotten much use and it's not the first thing I think of grabbing for some reason. Maybe I should load it up with a metal cutting wheel and store it closer to hand and see how that goes.What's the problem with a cheap 4.5" angle grinder? Almost an order of magnitude cheaper that the options you are considering.
Yup.... angle grinder and a zip cut disc will do most of your metal cutting needs.What's the problem with a cheap 4.5" angle grinder? Almost an order of magnitude cheaper that the options you are considering.
That's probably more than half the reason I don't use it much. Loud, torquey and intimidating. For space reasons my vice lives on an overhead shelf, so getting it down just adds to the whole overhead of the process, but I have to deal with that for most of my other cutting tools anyway.Please be careful with them.... they bite fast and deep.
Securing your workpiece is 90% of the battle. A cheap bench vise is a game changer.
While it isn't ideal for a grinder, a hitch attachment for the vice so you can slide it into your trailer hitch can be helpful if you don't have a place to mount it permanently. For most jobs you wouldn't even need to pin it, just slide the tongue in.That's probably more than half the reason I don't use it much. Loud, torquey and intimidating. For space reasons my vice lives on an overhead shelf, so getting it down just adds to the whole overhead of the process, but I have to deal with that for most of my other cutting tools anyway.
Definitely most..... but not allAgain... not to sound elitist... BUT I betcha I cut a lot more metals than most here.
For stuff like that, I just use and disc cutter with a zip disc. Easy and quick, but the cuts may not be the straightest.I've got one, but it's never gotten much use and it's not the first thing I think of grabbing for some reason. Maybe I should load it up with a metal cutting wheel and store it closer to hand and see how that goes.
I have lots of steel cutting stuff, the most used is a cheep 120v grinder with zip cut wheels.What's the problem with a cheap 4.5" angle grinder? Almost an order of magnitude cheaper than the options you are considering.