| Author |
electric rebar cutter benders
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| marson 2006-07-13, 1:25 pm |
| I'm looking at portable electric rebar cutters for jobsite use. most i
would ever cut would be #5 grade 60. i have an old hub cutter that just
SUCKS. I've never used an electric cutter but know they are out there.
there are a few brands out there that i have never heard of like
Benner Nawman, Rome Manufacturing, and Lobster. Quite a price range
too--from 800 to 1500 bucks. Does anyone have any experience with
these? am i foolish to buy the cheapest from Rome manufacturing?
Thanks
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| Lawrence 2006-07-13, 1:25 pm |
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marson wrote:
> I'm looking at portable electric rebar cutters for jobsite use. most i
> would ever cut would be #5 grade 60. i have an old hub cutter that just
> SUCKS. I've never used an electric cutter but know they are out there.
> there are a few brands out there that i have never heard of like
> Benner Nawman, Rome Manufacturing, and Lobster. Quite a price range
> too--from 800 to 1500 bucks. Does anyone have any experience with
> these? am i foolish to buy the cheapest from Rome manufacturing?
> Thanks
That one is still a pretty pricey tool marson at $800. here's the
link:
http://www.constructioncomplete.com...ebarCutter.html
I am not knowledgable in this area but I do not think you are foolish
to buy such a tool. I think that if you needed a more expensive one
then you would already know it and you would likely be somone who would
use it quite frequently and know what you need. that one in the link
sounds nice and I guessing it would be am improvement over what you are
using.
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| Dan Deckert 2006-07-14, 1:25 pm |
| Hydraulic over manual, hmm.
http://www.constructioncomplete.com...rsElectric.html
These actually work pretty well.
Dan
"marson" <briankontio@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:1152802953.545419.140480@m79g2000cwm.googlegroups.com...
> I'm looking at portable electric rebar cutters for jobsite use. most i
> would ever cut would be #5 grade 60. i have an old hub cutter that just
> SUCKS. I've never used an electric cutter but know they are out there.
> there are a few brands out there that i have never heard of like
> Benner Nawman, Rome Manufacturing, and Lobster. Quite a price range
> too--from 800 to 1500 bucks. Does anyone have any experience with
> these? am i foolish to buy the cheapest from Rome manufacturing?
> Thanks
>
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| Benner nawman or multiquip are the better names.
Dont let your help run them while the machine is sitting on dirt.
it draws the dirt through the motor and ruins the machine.
i make sure they set the machine on a piece of ply or whatever is available.
you'll have better longevity if you buy the shear that cuts a #8 bar.
the larger model shear is only a few hundred more than the smaller one.
i've bought a couple lightly used ones on ebay for around 700 bucks each.
ive seen new ones go for 900 or a thousand. if you adjust the stop correctly
for the size material you cut and keep all the blades and bolts tight,
they last quite a while
"marson" <briankontio@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:1152802953.545419.140480@m79g2000cwm.googlegroups.com...
> I'm looking at portable electric rebar cutters for jobsite use. most i
> would ever cut would be #5 grade 60. i have an old hub cutter that just
> SUCKS. I've never used an electric cutter but know they are out there.
> there are a few brands out there that i have never heard of like
> Benner Nawman, Rome Manufacturing, and Lobster. Quite a price range
> too--from 800 to 1500 bucks. Does anyone have any experience with
> these? am i foolish to buy the cheapest from Rome manufacturing?
> Thanks
>
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| marson 2006-07-16, 8:25 pm |
| thanks Dan D. that was the kind of advice i was looking for.
Dan D wrote:[color=darkred]
> Benner nawman or multiquip are the better names.
> Dont let your help run them while the machine is sitting on dirt.
> it draws the dirt through the motor and ruins the machine.
> i make sure they set the machine on a piece of ply or whatever is available.
> you'll have better longevity if you buy the shear that cuts a #8 bar.
> the larger model shear is only a few hundred more than the smaller one.
>
> i've bought a couple lightly used ones on ebay for around 700 bucks each.
> ive seen new ones go for 900 or a thousand. if you adjust the stop correctly
> for the size material you cut and keep all the blades and bolts tight,
> they last quite a while
>
> "marson" <briankontio@gmail.com> wrote in message
> news:1152802953.545419.140480@m79g2000cwm.googlegroups.com...
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