*Works well for a DIY home improvement job **MyBest.Tools** A little sloppy in the cut. Water reservoir is too small. Cut one 20" tile - time to refill.*
This worked great for redoing the shower/bathtub of my kid's bathroom. ua-cam.com/users/postUgkxfiuHoZJo3bgdVPFRxQ-iqPpfbEHl2cYt I didn't like the guide, so I took it off. I just used a fine tipped sharpie on the tile and followed that line. It does make a wet mess, and once I started looking like I wet myself I started wearing a towel and apron while cutting. The blade it came with worked great until we wore it out. It was better than the replacement one we bought. I tried looking for just their blade, but failed. Not really for larger tiles unless you stack stuff on either side to support the tiles. Anyway, would definitley buy again.
Also always used a 5 gallon bucket for clean water supply for pump and my brick layer liked setting the saw on a large square board on top of a wheelbarrow
Great video format, you cut between the two saws seamlessly, and showed me very quickly what the differences were. Helped me pick the 24000. Nice video, good presentation.
On the smaller tile saw use the plunge cutting method and just get a score mark in case something breaks cut the front end and the back end and then cut the whole thing through especially on porcelain
As an advance DIY , well I was trained a lot by grandpa - team lead at a major auto manuf plant - Why in the heck can't Dewalt for sure and or others get out of their own way and build in super precision features to supplant the foam board technique for long rip with a speed square. Just take the best of metals milling cutting , fine wood working , 40yr veteran tile craftsman and just build it FFS. My expectation is to have precise to the millimeter variable cut/fence adjustment , zero tray wobble, no job site hacks to do any and all cuts seriously for the guys doing this 5 days a week ! PS I did my first big project on a dudes Dewalt that was all beat up and was good experience to include use of several adaptive hacks, speed square and clamps.
I find with the 2400, if you pass the tile through to the depth of about 4 millimetres , then pass it trough again to full depth, you get a squarer cut.
My D24000 is 7 yrs old. Its a professional wet saw. Nothing that can touch it, except maybe the 10” Beast. They all have their imperfections. Either they're messy, table gives, or not enough clearance. Pick what uou can or cannot work with
Just did 800 ft of 15x30. Cutting 24x48 now and may get another bathroom of the same. I have an old normal size Husqvarna that works great still and a Pearl saw too. The larger dewalt may be a nice addition to the family.
If you mark your 4' tile with a straight line, square to the horizontal edge, you can cut the first 2', stop and flip the tile over and cut the remaining 2'. Yes it's not as nice as having a tile saw that can handle 4' long material, but it works really well so long as your cut line is correct.
I'm having a really hard time with the 36000 I'm trying to miter 45 angel with porcelain, it keeps chipping I changed the blade still chipping and bad finishing what should I do?
Will the 3600 water tray extensions fit on the 2400? Just to make the 2400 more water friendly indoors? Thank you for all your great content and expertise!
Great question, checked this today and no. The width of the new D36000 tray is 30" and the D24000 width is 26.5" Also, the side water tray connects to the sliding tray and the tray on the D36000 is much longer than the D24000.
You think I can rip a 60 inch shower jamb that’s 6 inches wide. I need to cut off 2 inches. I seen your video where you used the IQ for it. Would the dewalt 2400 be able to pull this off and how much difference of crooked should I expect from start to end of the 60 inch jam
Where the older saws made in USA? Mine is about 17-18 years old and was in box for 8 years and used with higher end brick cutting blades excellent performance
I owned the original, and it worked great compared to my MK diamond. Throw some plastic down, and to the back, meter the water flow, and I'd cut tile indoors all winter long. I'm curious about the new one. Both could be used in the garage easily enough; but accuracy matters. I would recommend cleaning the saw after each use and run 5 gallons of water through the pump for longevity.
Absolutely fantastic review thank you very much. Really appreciate it. I’m actually in the UK. I’m going to buy the smaller tile cutter on your advice. Thank you so much. Thanks again John
Man....I have an off subject question. Live in a small town and get a good bit of tile jobs. I know alot of things change timeframe but...do you feel LFT speed up installation alot more? Ill be real...I've been in one bathroom about 8 days tiling. Subway tile....9 foot ceilings....5 foot wainscoting and really small mosaic inlays, and Mosaic floors. Is this typical for you for it to take longer? It is crushing my self esteem! Haha. I use schluter products....ledger boards....go all out on mu methods but God, I feel like its because there's so many tile....
Unfortunately subway is "in" right now... Hundreds and hundreds of tiles on the wall. We bump up our installation price if it's small format like that and let our clients know ahead of time less $ for large format and more $ for small format for their project.
Hey Bro you may want to try my way. When you cut 36'' tile ,lift cutting blade and put tile on regular deck. Drop blade cut and slide . So you will not need speed square or 1/2 filler.
Wondering if you could just buy the D36000 roller tray and saw head support from Dewalt spares. And then retro-fit them to the D24000 instead of buying the complete saw?
They really should have addressed the stand and made it into something similar to a MS-UV type cart. I always cut outdoors so I striped my trays and mounted my 24k on a MS-UV and its so much better to transport/set-up and store now. Whatever you do dont use the Dewalt mitersaw stand its horrible.
@@TilerHub No sorry I do not Instagram. As long as you dont need the trays it works great no issues whatsoever over year later. It folds up and rolls away in about 10 seconds.
@@lgbfjbsupporter5566 o have delta Cruzer and that’s what I like about it, I don’t like lifting heavy saws, that’s why I never purchased a target saw, I want to try dewalt but need to do what you did.
Hey man, big fan here all the way from Puerto Rico.... for some reason they don't ship the D36000 to Puerto Rico.... by any chance, could you make a review or RUBI and/or Cortag? Would love your opinion on them Much appreciated
I wanna see the d36000 vs the lackmond beast..! Feels like dewalt 24000 was a game changer for the industry, saving my back from the ol trusty target.. but a guy at my work just got the 36000 and what a mess.. took me 20 mins to figure out how to put the tray system together, and it still drips everywhere..! I’ll take my d24000 any day.. but I’ve had my eye on the beast for 4 years now.. when I’m not tiling I love working in my garage with wood.. and I own nothing but delta.. so I’d love to see/know your opinion about the beast against the 36000… Ps. Still can’t get my hands on that 18 inch clear speed square.. where and how much..!? Keep up the good work my dood..!
Once again another quality video. I do wish they would make a better stand. I personally like my gravity stand on the Kobalt that I own. Just personal opinion. I appreciate you brother. Always informative. “FLIP “
Honestly the worst part of d2400 is that you can only cut one side of the tile so far without bumping into the arm. Such a kick in the nuts every time it happens
After another 3 years of ownership, I'm selling my 24000. It's overkill for most things and too small for large format. I'm switching to a Makita 18v brushless wet saw, with the water system, attached to a Makita 1.5m rail.
I've owned 3, not by choice and have had problems and deen disappointed with all 3. The only pros for this saw are the weight and the size of the tray. The cons are there is a lot of back and forth play in the tray, lack of power it really bogs down cutting porcelain and when there is a lot of moisture in the air the port on top of the saw sucks it in and kick the GFI, the only solution for that is a vacuum or a blower , so you waste time drying the inside of the saw. I've had issues with all 3 that I have owned. The first one, the power switch went out in a month, I had to Dremil the holes on the extension tray because it sat a heavy 1/16 above the main tray so cutting any thing bigger than 12x12 would break toward the end, I had to do this to the second saw also. I had the second saw just quit on me for no reason after about 6 months and start working after buying the third one. The third one had to have the bearings replaced after 3 months.
I’ve been tiling for 10 years with the dewalt 24000 and never had any issues. Yes the tray has a little play but that is adjustable. You can fix it with a twist of a screw. I’ve never had it suck in air and shot off. I’ve never had any issues with it bogging down on porcelain. I’ve cut granite with it. You are using a crap blade if it’s bogging down and pushing too hard.
@@AllBayEveryDayI've been doing tile for almost 30 years, nobody that makes a living doing this does not buy crap blades. The reason it bogs down is because it is direct drive, they are way overpriced for what they are.
none of those machines can cut tile, big with clean and straight cuts, it would have to have a system that when you put the tile does not move to have a clean cut,
while the 3600 looks sweet & is awesome, that 90 lbs weight kills it for me. ps. I am curious how the Harbor Freight Diamondback 7" 24 rip/18 diag cut unit compares to Cobalt & Ridgid? is that somewhere on this channel? also.. your thoughts on Bridge tile saws vs. table tile saws?
All 3 of those saws are relatively the same with cutting capacity. The Ridgid has the best warranty if you are an installer. The D24000 is simply the GOAT. Check the price at Contractorsdirect dot com ua-cam.com/video/78gdRKtYX5Q/v-deo.html ua-cam.com/video/q8R6eQmdKyk/v-deo.html ua-cam.com/video/uStRBExgpE4/v-deo.html
*Works well for a DIY home improvement job **MyBest.Tools** A little sloppy in the cut. Water reservoir is too small. Cut one 20" tile - time to refill.*
This worked great for redoing the shower/bathtub of my kid's bathroom. ua-cam.com/users/postUgkxfiuHoZJo3bgdVPFRxQ-iqPpfbEHl2cYt I didn't like the guide, so I took it off. I just used a fine tipped sharpie on the tile and followed that line. It does make a wet mess, and once I started looking like I wet myself I started wearing a towel and apron while cutting. The blade it came with worked great until we wore it out. It was better than the replacement one we bought. I tried looking for just their blade, but failed. Not really for larger tiles unless you stack stuff on either side to support the tiles. Anyway, would definitley buy again.
Also always used a 5 gallon bucket for clean water supply for pump and my brick layer liked setting the saw on a large square board on top of a wheelbarrow
Great video format, you cut between the two saws seamlessly, and showed me very quickly what the differences were. Helped me pick the 24000. Nice video, good presentation.
On the smaller tile saw use the plunge cutting method and just get a score mark in case something breaks cut the front end and the back end and then cut the whole thing through especially on porcelain
Pro tip: throw on caster wheels. It adds more height for us taller tile guys than you'd think...
How do you get casters on that stand?
As an advance DIY , well I was trained a lot by grandpa - team lead at a major auto manuf plant - Why in the heck can't Dewalt for sure and or others get out of their own way and build in super precision features to supplant the foam board technique for long rip with a speed square. Just take the best of metals milling cutting , fine wood working , 40yr veteran tile craftsman and just build it FFS. My expectation is to have precise to the millimeter variable cut/fence adjustment , zero tray wobble, no job site hacks to do any and all cuts seriously for the guys doing this 5 days a week ! PS I did my first big project on a dudes Dewalt that was all beat up and was good experience to include use of several adaptive hacks, speed square and clamps.
I find with the 2400, if you pass the tile through to the depth of about 4 millimetres , then pass it trough again to full depth, you get a squarer cut.
Thank you for your review comparison. I just ordered the D24000 and can’t wait to use it.
My D24000 is 7 yrs old. Its a professional wet saw. Nothing that can touch it, except maybe the 10” Beast. They all have their imperfections. Either they're messy, table gives, or not enough clearance. Pick what uou can or cannot work with
Just did 800 ft of 15x30. Cutting 24x48 now and may get another bathroom of the same. I have an old normal size Husqvarna that works great still and a Pearl saw too. The larger dewalt may be a nice addition to the family.
hi what cutting depth does the machine have at 45 degrees? I mean can 2cm thick tiles also be cut danut?
If you mark your 4' tile with a straight line, square to the horizontal edge, you can cut the first 2', stop and flip the tile over and cut the remaining 2'. Yes it's not as nice as having a tile saw that can handle 4' long material, but it works really well so long as your cut line is correct.
⭐️question ⭐️ Does the 36000 use the same motor?
I'm having a really hard time with the 36000 I'm trying to miter 45 angel with porcelain, it keeps chipping I changed the blade still chipping and bad finishing what should I do?
Will the 3600 water tray extensions fit on the 2400? Just to make the 2400 more water friendly indoors? Thank you for all your great content and expertise!
Great question, checked this today and no. The width of the new D36000 tray is 30" and the D24000 width is 26.5"
Also, the side water tray connects to the sliding tray and the tray on the D36000 is much longer than the D24000.
You think I can rip a 60 inch shower jamb that’s 6 inches wide. I need to cut off 2 inches. I seen your video where you used the IQ for it. Would the dewalt 2400 be able to pull this off and how much difference of crooked should I expect from start to end of the 60 inch jam
Where the older saws made in USA? Mine is about 17-18 years old and was in box for 8 years and used with higher end brick cutting blades excellent performance
I owned the original, and it worked great compared to my MK diamond. Throw some plastic down, and to the back, meter the water flow, and I'd cut tile indoors all winter long. I'm curious about the new one. Both could be used in the garage easily enough; but accuracy matters. I would recommend cleaning the saw after each use and run 5 gallons of water through the pump for longevity.
Thanks for the tips, it's a great saw!
Great video and very timely. I'm picking up up Dewalt soon, so this helps.
Absolutely fantastic review thank you very much. Really appreciate it. I’m actually in the UK. I’m going to buy the smaller tile cutter on your advice. Thank you so much. Thanks again John
Great comparison thanks!!!
Hi , how I can to get this one but I can't because I am in New Zealand.
Great review man love the d24000 pretty sure my next saw will be the iq
Man....I have an off subject question. Live in a small town and get a good bit of tile jobs. I know alot of things change timeframe but...do you feel LFT speed up installation alot more? Ill be real...I've been in one bathroom about 8 days tiling. Subway tile....9 foot ceilings....5 foot wainscoting and really small mosaic inlays, and Mosaic floors. Is this typical for you for it to take longer? It is crushing my self esteem! Haha. I use schluter products....ledger boards....go all out on mu methods but God, I feel like its because there's so many tile....
Unfortunately subway is "in" right now... Hundreds and hundreds of tiles on the wall. We bump up our installation price if it's small format like that and let our clients know ahead of time less $ for large format and more $ for small format for their project.
@@LandbergTileTV thanks man...keep doing your thing!
Dude...thanks. I've been debating between the two...I thinking 3600 works for me, thanks again for a great review
Awesome! Guess I’ll be taking your advice and just get the D2400 and save me some money. Thank you.😊
Good decision! Check out contractors direct dot com, good prices and a free dewalt tool
@@LandbergTileTV Thank you sir. I appreciate the info.
I'm sticking with the d24000, most of my tile has been no larger than 24x24. I may get the d36000 if I get a huge large format job
Go Berg!
I'm good with my D24000 👍🏻
Thanks Much!
Can I cut stone with these? The affinity stone to be exact.
Yes you can
Great review. Helped make my decision on the new 36”
Hey Bro you may want to try my way. When you cut 36'' tile ,lift cutting blade and put tile on regular deck. Drop blade cut and slide . So you will not need speed square or 1/2 filler.
I think that only works up to 30 inch tiles on the 24000, this method is called "with plunge cut"
Thanks..made my decission a lot easier...👍
For sure! Happy the vid help!
Wondering if you could just buy the D36000 roller tray and saw head support from Dewalt spares. And then retro-fit them to the D24000 instead of buying the complete saw?
Won't work unless you fabricate and install the d36000 stopper on the d24000 rail/frame. The saw head maybe..
Thank you! Great video! It answered all my questions.
Hey, does either of these saws plunge cut?
Yes, both plunge and miter 22.5 - 45
They really should have addressed the stand and made it into something similar to a MS-UV type cart. I always cut outdoors so I striped my trays and mounted my 24k on a MS-UV and its so much better to transport/set-up and store now. Whatever you do dont use the Dewalt mitersaw stand its horrible.
Do you have pictures of it? Are you Instagram ?
@@TilerHub No sorry I do not Instagram. As long as you dont need the trays it works great no issues whatsoever over year later. It folds up and rolls away in about 10 seconds.
@@lgbfjbsupporter5566 o have delta Cruzer and that’s what I like about it, I don’t like lifting heavy saws, that’s why I never purchased a target saw, I want to try dewalt but need to do what you did.
🤔 I wonder, if the trays are swappable. Would be nice to get a decent amount of support for the fraction of the price 😎 D3000
That’s my question. Also the arm. If we can swap that we have a hell of a hack.
Hey man, big fan here all the way from Puerto Rico.... for some reason they don't ship the D36000 to Puerto Rico.... by any chance, could you make a review or RUBI and/or Cortag? Would love your opinion on them
Much appreciated
Did 4' tiles even exist 20 years ago? It's wild that we're needing saws to rip these huge tiles these days,
Good work! Just got my 24000 😎 36 was never an option for me after I read same motor amps, there wasn’t really a purpose to get it.
Nice 👍
Thank you very much, I really enjoy your reviews. Top man
I wanna see the d36000 vs the lackmond beast..! Feels like dewalt 24000 was a game changer for the industry, saving my back from the ol trusty target.. but a guy at my work just got the 36000 and what a mess.. took me 20 mins to figure out how to put the tray system together, and it still drips everywhere..! I’ll take my d24000 any day.. but I’ve had my eye on the beast for 4 years now.. when I’m not tiling I love working in my garage with wood.. and I own nothing but delta.. so I’d love to see/know your opinion about the beast against the 36000…
Ps. Still can’t get my hands on that 18 inch clear speed square.. where and how much..!?
Keep up the good work my dood..!
This is all I have for you and the clear square is from Hunt Tool Company
ua-cam.com/video/zQgj4IdgVzE/v-deo.html
Love the bigger saw, more space to cut through tile completely
Wish Milwaukee would make one.
Once again another quality video. I do wish they would make a better stand. I personally like my gravity stand on the Kobalt that I own. Just personal opinion. I appreciate you brother. Always informative. “FLIP “
Thanks flip! Agree on the stand, a 7" Dewalt needs to come out with a gravity stand! Would be nice 😎
Thx you for you nice video answer all my questions
Can you cut a 24x24 on a diagonal with the 24000
18x18 max diagonal on that saw
but the d36000 will cut 24x24 diagonal
36000 it is, thanks!
Good info, thanks
Just one thing you forgot to say the 36000 es better to rip entire tile of 45 degree
can I cut rocks/stones in half with it?
yes you can
Dewalt would dominate the market if they would come out with a gravity stand . That’s my only complaint of the dewalt saw.
That and a small light 7 inch!
Yes please!!!
Concise review. Fantastic!
Thanks!
Honestly the worst part of d2400 is that you can only cut one side of the tile so far without bumping into the arm. Such a kick in the nuts every time it happens
That doesn't happen on the d36000
Yo that hack saves me 600 bucks well worth it thanks broski
Sure thing brother
Great video as always.
Thanks!
After another 3 years of ownership, I'm selling my 24000. It's overkill for most things and too small for large format. I'm switching to a Makita 18v brushless wet saw, with the water system, attached to a Makita 1.5m rail.
Interesting. I don't know if Makita has a compatible rail system for that 5" , or do they?
@@LandbergTileTVMakita 198673-2 Guide Rail Adapter is all you need.
I've owned 3, not by choice and have had problems and deen disappointed with all 3. The only pros for this saw are the weight and the size of the tray. The cons are there is a lot of back and forth play in the tray, lack of power it really bogs down cutting porcelain and when there is a lot of moisture in the air the port on top of the saw sucks it in and kick the GFI, the only solution for that is a vacuum or a blower , so you waste time drying the inside of the saw. I've had issues with all 3 that I have owned. The first one, the power switch went out in a month, I had to Dremil the holes on the extension tray because it sat a heavy 1/16 above the main tray so cutting any thing bigger than 12x12 would break toward the end, I had to do this to the second saw also. I had the second saw just quit on me for no reason after about 6 months and start working after buying the third one. The third one had to have the bearings replaced after 3 months.
nothing worse than quality tools made in _ _ _ _ _
I’ve been tiling for 10 years with the dewalt 24000 and never had any issues. Yes the tray has a little play but that is adjustable. You can fix it with a twist of a screw. I’ve never had it suck in air and shot off. I’ve never had any issues with it bogging down on porcelain. I’ve cut granite with it. You are using a crap blade if it’s bogging down and pushing too hard.
@@AllBayEveryDayI've been doing tile for almost 30 years, nobody that makes a living doing this does not buy crap blades. The reason it bogs down is because it is direct drive, they are way overpriced for what they are.
I need a new machine, but I believe the 24000 will do the trick
none of those machines can cut tile, big with clean and straight cuts, it would have to have a system that when you put the tile does not move to have a clean cut,
Nice truck bro
Thanks brother, she's an old 2011!
@@LandbergTileTV sweetness. Pristine condition. Sure wouldn’t look like that in the northeast. Lol. Great vids BTW. Top notch tips.
Saying a 90lb saw is easy to move around is kind of ridiculous.
Fuck. Great video. Huge help my man.
Dang feel like a dummy you already have a video comparing the 2..
🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷👏👏👏
Anyone who uses that dewalt blade is not a tile guy. That blade is garbage
Might as well burn out the blade that comes with the saw before upgrading to a new blade.
@@LandbergTileTV What blade do you recommend? An all around blade. Thanks
while the 3600 looks sweet & is awesome, that 90 lbs weight kills it for me.
ps. I am curious how the Harbor Freight Diamondback 7" 24 rip/18 diag cut unit compares to Cobalt & Ridgid? is that somewhere on this channel? also.. your thoughts on Bridge tile saws vs. table tile saws?
All 3 of those saws are relatively the same with cutting capacity. The Ridgid has the best warranty if you are an installer. The D24000 is simply the GOAT. Check the price at Contractorsdirect dot com
ua-cam.com/video/78gdRKtYX5Q/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/q8R6eQmdKyk/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/uStRBExgpE4/v-deo.html