He's ALMOST got it right. After cutting hundreds of bottles I have found that 1. You need boiling water, 2. A bucket of ice water. 3. Rubber O rings. I got them from the hardware store and they make different sizes, the larger ones obviously for the wine bottles. I have a hot water maker with a pointed spout, I slide the o rings on both sides the score. ( this concentrates the boiling water directly onto the score. while turning the bottle by the neck of the bottle I pour the hot water directly onto the score. For medium thickness glass I do this for 20 seconds, for thicker glass like Grey Goose bottles 30 seconds while turning the bottle. Then I immediately dip the bottle neck first into the ice water. When you put it in neck first this creates pressure with in the bottle and this actually helps to separate the glass. I have a success rate of about 80% using this method.
I I have 2 that I use The Green thing that fits in the top (Mouth) of the bottle and you score around the bottle. Got it at Hobby Lobby, it was pretty cheap at the time. (I can't remember the exact name of it) The one thing you have to remember with this one is to apply equal pressure throughout the entire score or the score could come out uneven, This is a good bottle cutter but does take some practice to get it right. Another one that is on the market is the Bindu. this is the type where you lay the bottle onto plastic wheels and turn the bottle. They have a website where you can order it, I I think a couple of years ago I paid 50 bucks for it. The Bindu takes less practice. In all cases make sure you wear gloves when scoring the bottles, I have had a few come apart in my hand, luckily I wasn't cut but very easily could have been.
why is there so many haters in bad comments on this guy he's not trying to sell anything to anybody he's just simply giving people the general idea of who may want a hobby you people need to lay off men watch it enjoy it or don't simply my opinion
One of the best videos about cutting glass bottles. Skip to 4:15 to see the cutting process Skip to 6:32 to see the splitting process I recommend watching all from minute 4:00
My mom cut bottles back in the 70s. She said you'd use the lightest pressure, just enough to disrupt the surface, and only slightly overlapping. Then she'd use a candle to slightly warm one side, (and only one side, other side she'd have a wet dish towel on the other side) and a flick of her finger. The tops would just pop off. The "cut" was so incredibly clean, every time. Often have a hard time even seeing the cut. She'd even do spirals, dips and other shapes. Imagine instead of cutting around, she'd cut vertical lines, along the length. Sorta kinda like a rounded off sawtooth pattern. My dad also made her a device that used electricity to do the breaks, and another device that did the same job, just a different way.(no heat of any kind) both were instant.
I just purchased a bottle cutter with wheels and glass cutter, In their video, they use the hot water and cold method. As in your video, it works perfectly. I thank you for confirming that this method works. I'm now reassured I made the right decision.
Stop by a a local bar or cidery. Ask them if you can have a box of their empty bottles. Tell them you're practicing glass cutting IF THEY ASK. Dont tell them, if they dont ask. They might charge you for them. Happy cutting to you!
This is the most informative and helpful video on this subject that I have seen. I took your method and then came up with a way of doing it pretty quickly. I boiled a pot of water and kept it on the range at a nice boil. I had several bottles scored. As you mentioned, just one time around with a light score... Then I laid the scored bottle on top of the boiling water and rolled it for a bit. Once I figured it was good and heated, I took it to my sink. I ran cold water over the outside score line all the way around, then filled the bottle with the cold H20. The stress line is then cooled outside and inside. The bottom of the bottle falls out when I'm filling it (and keeping the bottle as close to the bottom of the sink as possible). I had placed a wooden cutting board in the bottom of the sink to prevent the bottom piece from breaking when it drops out. Perfect cut line! I then took another bottle, and repeated the process over and over because I still had boiling water on the range and plenty of scored bottles ready. If the bottle doesn't cut the first time around while being cooled at the sink I just stick it back in the boiling water and it snaps right off. I think having even heating and cooling around the circumference of the bottle also helps to ensure you get a nice clean cut. Thank you, thank you, and thanks again. I had given up on the process till I ran across your video.
My mom bought a bottle cutter in the 70's. After a few projects with soda and beer bottles she quit it and sold it cheap to someone else. She basically made a few soda and beer glasses but even after sanding them everyone was afraid to drink from them because of the glass being able to be rubbed off. The next thing she bought was a rock polisher. That was around and in use for quite awhile longer. 70's project tools were fun enough but going picnicking at a dam , reservoir or lake had much more appeal. Edit: She wanted to make stemware from the tops but never got around to it. So her following project was make " tuits " in circular shapes...and would hand them to people after they would mention that they need to get around to it, to get something going. She would reach into her purse and hand them one little paper circle and say " there you go ". They would ask what it is or why she handed it to them. She would say, " you said you just needed to get a round tuit and I just handed you one. You knew when it happened because you would hear an exasperated voice moaning " Lydia ! " and my mom laughing really hard.
I tried, with disastrous results, to cut a bottle with my 4" angle grinder with a diamond blade on it. Hands down, that is the coolest trick I've seen yet. Better still, you showed all the flaws in the "tried" methods, and gave me a working procedure for cutting my bottles. Thanks
Just cut my very first bottle using this method. Followed the steps exactly and got a perfect cut. I love that the only 'specialty' item needed is the glass scorer. Thanks for the great info.
I just tried this method about 20 minutes ago. I have never cut a bottle in my life but my first, and only 2 wine bottles that I used this method with came out PERFECT. Thanks Dan for such an awesome idea. my mom has about 100 bottles she wants to do projects with and you just saved us a lot of time.
I just tried your method to break bottles, and I have to say it is the best and quickest. I only sumerged the bottles in iced water to make the impact even stronger.
Great video. Best technique I’ve seen. It works really well. Instead of buying a bottle cutting jig I screwed my glass cutter to my workbench and attached two pieces of 2 by 4 to the bench as well for positive stops for each bottle. Pulley adjustable. Cost me nada. Thanks for technique.
I've just had to cut hundreds of bottles for a home project. I started with a rotary cutter which took ten minutes per bottle. I then found this video, and was able to cut each in less than 20 seconds. I owe you weeks of my life, thank you for this video! So much simpler than the ice cube and burning thread methods..
Green bottles and especially wine or champagne bottles are great for beginners and learning the process. Clear glass and thin walled beer bottles require more experience. The thinner glass on beer bottles have many inconsistencies so the thermal stressing process requires a bit of skill.
Amazing! It worked perfectly! My only feedback: Rather than a sink I used a large boiling pot of water and a large bowl of ice water. I used a measuring cup to pour boiling water over the bottle then I used a measuring cup to pour ice water over the bottle. I was able to control the final cracking so the wine bottle broke in the ice water. Thank you for this video!
Your system works. I used it last weekend while making beer bottle guitar slides. In the past I would dunk the bottle in boiling water--with mixed results. Your video shows a better way. Thanks.
Thanks for a great video. You've covered all the methods of cutting a bottle and saved me a lot of trial and error (and bottles). Another fine example of "Internet Intelligence".
I wanted to do some projects with wine bottles for sometimes now but was too intimidated to cut it myself. I have watched a few videos but something about yours gave me the confidence to do it and have a clean cut. I am getting ready to buy it a bottle cutter today. Thank you. By the way I loved the cat, it was like comic relief. I laughed my head off.
My daughter bought me a bottle cutter some years ago. It cost about $10. She bought it at an arts & craft store and its quick and allot easier than any of the ways you've shown. I've used it for years on all kinds of bottles and never had a problem.
@@desmondthomas4531 I would think at any arts & crafts store. It was awhile back,but I imagine that Hobby Lobby or at Micheals. Micheals is where my daughter bought mine. If I find out, I'll pass it on to you.
Your hands down best I seen. Saw all videos of guys doing what you show not to do. Results all the same, jagged edges and unacceptable sloppy breaks. You had the cleanest , near perfect breaks out of all videos I found. Sweet technique thanks for lesson.
Used to cut bottles a lot when I was a kid, using the bottle cutter you have. I used the tapper it came with to break the tops off, and seldom got a clean break. Later I learned about using a candle and that was better, but still unpredictable. If I'd'a known your technique, I'd've got the results I was looking for. Too bad there was no Internet in the 70s. Thanks for the video!
You used that kids glass thing every one got for Christmas making drinking glasses by Boxing Day down hospital for stitches wish I thought of wax before
Awesome technique ! Was wanting to make guitar slides, so I got out my glass cutter from 1969, same one you used. But I had forgot my skill of cutting a clean edge. Will try your method ! Thank you.
Very cool, thanks for the great tip. About 50 years ago my grandfather taught me to to use the flaming string method. Your method is obviously much better. It just goes to prove that sometimes a gentle touch is better than a lot of force.
I have tried this method and it WORKS !! I use a wood lathe. I find a set of chuck jaws that will fit the base of the bottle, be it a beer bottle or a wine bottle. I then install my live center in the tail stock to receive the mouth of the bottle. I set up the tool rest with two pieces of wood to center the glass cutter between them and hold it exactly perpendicular to the lathe axis (center). I then score the bottle once around, being careful not to double score. As this video instructs, I then pour boiling water SLOWLY over the bottle at the score (in the sink) as I rotate it. I then hold the scored bottle under a small stream of cold water from the sink faucet. Sometimes it takes two doses, but at some point the sides just separate noiselessly and cleanly. Beer bottles are more difficult because they usually have a seam of thicker glass that runs parallel to the bottle's axis. The method still works but sometimes that seam needs some sanding. Wine bottles work great.
Did you ever made the video on how to make the wine cutter with a regular one? I want to make a chandelier but I can only find the regular glass cutter at home depit.
GREENPOWERSCIENCE Hey dude, is it possible to reseal the bottle with glue after you cut it and make the score line invisible? I'd really appreciate a response.
SuperElite27000000 Yes it is possible. I do it all the time as you can see here at www.LucidLightLamps.com The score line will be virtually invisible if you get a nice clean bottle separation and use the proper technique to bond the bottle back together. In order to get a perfectly clean cut you might need to try this bottle cutting process: ua-cam.com/video/QE28BZPcX9A/v-deo.htmlrel=0
Wow, this 14 year old video is the best I have found on the bottle cutting subject. I seems to have done everything wrong on my first bottle cutting experiment :D
Not bad, but I have gotten even cleaner cuts _with no scoring in advance_ by wrapping a *nichrome wire* almost all the way around the bottle/jar and applying a large current through the wire to produce *very concentrated thermal stress.* The wire needs to be fed through a heavy conductor like small copper tubes to prevent the part of the wire not in contact with glass from overheating. Getting the power level right is important, and the wire should not be too thin nor too thick. Something like 1/5 to 1/10 the thickness of the glass seems good.
Awesome job! Besides loving how nearly perfect that cut is, there are 2 other things that really impress me. One, is that you did it using simple tools that everyone would either already have or could get, AND USE, very easily (the glass cutting tool), and second, that ALL the "experts" said you're never going to get a perfect cut, AND YOU PROVED THEM WRONG AND FOUND A WAY TO DO IT. For everybody that is afraid to do something differently, or to even TRY, because you think that there CAN'T be a better way to do whatever it is, DARE TO BE DIFFERENT AND PROVE THEM WRONG. Just because everyone has been making a wheel the same way for thousands of years (okay, maybe not thousands), that doesn't mean you can't find a BETTER way. LOVE, LOVE LOVE THIS!
after watching this a couple times threw and trying it each time, i figured out that i was getting the bottle to hot and it was cracking the side of the bottle. after i did what the video says, lightly heat bottle with hot water then cool, add a little hot water, it snapped correctly, thank you.
yes he knows what he talking about .works great only thing i could add is [lease remove the screw down lid the pressure was enough to blow it up in 20 peaces and it was a thick bottle !throw away lid .that way your heart won't try to jump out threw back bones ! took 10 yr's off my life span ! good to ya all.
I have a simple glass scoring plate that I use. Then I use hot & cold water alternately and get near perfect results almost every time. Happy to see a video that shows the same. I liked for the info but I subbed for the cat. 👀😁
Your bottle cutting method is awesome. I did modify my old Stanley thermos for exacting pour over the cut line. 1. Drilled 1/16 hole in lid for air vent. 2. Drilled 1/8 hole and installed 1/8 brass tubing for precision pour. I also rolled the edge of the tubing to keep water flowing even like a faucet. Please note, any small diameter of tubing will work. Like metal brake line
I made a bottle cutter by making a v-box you can lay the bottle in on its side with a glass cutter screwed down; scored a line; then used a nichrome wire in a circuit to heat it red hot. put the wire around the score line hit the power for a few seconds and the top falls off.
The trick my father and I used to open radio tubes was a trigger type soldering gun , we removed the tip and used a piece of bare 12 guage copper wire long enough to wrap around the glass , turning the glass as the wire is heating up . The progressive heat and vibration of the wire scoring the glass came out perfect every time 👍
@@davidgraemesmith1980 Yes but my mom would have shot my dad for taking apart the toaster to cut the radio tubes so I could build a FM receiver in the tubes for my 6 th. grade science fair project , LoL
@JASON VOORHEES I'm currently retired but I used to do air-conditioning, building maintenance and remodeling. Physics, electro chemistry, and electronics have been a hobby since grade school.
@JASON VOORHEES The radio tubes we were opening where for my sixth grade science fair project , building an FM radio on the leads inside the tubes , was a spin off of micro chip construction.
@JASON VOORHEES You can get a dual temperature trigger type soldering gun from Harbor freight for under twenty dollars , but as a make shift device , find an old laptop charger . They usually run 12 - 14 Volt's DC at around 1.2 to 2.5 amps which is enough to heat resistance wire like Toaster wire , but you may want to use a reostat ( variable resistor ) or make one to control the heat so you don't shatter the glass.
Aha! My method was too sudden with the hot water... slowly seems to be the key. It works now!! Thanks! Now I need to get more bottles! I wish I could show a pic of how easy it is.
You are a true expert in glass. You know the properties of glass like no one I've seen out there. This is the best video and the best method I've seen. Thanks for your work and sharing with us.
Put an elastic band each side of the score line. It will put the water exactly in the right place, hot then cold. Unfortunately not my idea, can't remember who told me.
Super, thanks for the straight forward and simple info! Been wanting to cut a bottle that got stuck into one of my terra cotta watering cups.. they are not coming apart so I need the bottom cut off the soda bottle. Why should I break a good bottle? Thanks again!
This has been used for years by people in the know. Another very important piece of information is that you never go over a score line. It dulls the carbon steel cutting wheel. You use steady pressure and listen. Once you go all the way around and the score line connects you stop.
The wheel on the cutter is not sharp at all and I don’t hear any scoring sound. If I look at the bottle I can’t even see that it’s scoring all the way around. What is the problem?
@@daviddewitt9365 the wheel doesn't have to be sharp. It just has to be harder than the glass. And if you don't hear it score you aren't using enough pressure. The cutting is considered dull if it skips. Never go over a score line it puts minute imperfections in the wheel that will cause it to skip while you try to score the glass.
Being a glazier for 35 yrs now,there's one way & only one way to a perfect cut every time & this is where ever the cutter finishes is the place you need to tap or apply pressure as quickly as you can because believe it or not the cut becomes cold the longer you leave it thus more often than not a uneven cut or a broken cut
I have been playing slide for over 30 years. Using other methods on UA-cam I used over 15 bottles I got 4 that will work. Doing it this way that Dan shows here, I had 3 bottles left, and I got 3 out of 3.....
you can use the neck or mouth of the wine bottle and bury most of it beside your baby tomatoe plants so you can directly water your plant and save water
I made a glass guitar-slide using this method! It really works. -And, I didn't even need that fancy bottle-scoring rig. I simply, carefully used a regular glass-scoring knife. ~Thanks!
+SR212787 yeah I saw it too. But still, this was one example. And that 30sec cut was already worth 50 of the last bottles I cut so who cares. His method is superior.
I "like" how your entire existence is clearly so pathetically miserable and meaningless that you had the time to spend watching such a creative and useful video (shared FREELY and generously to those of us who appreciate increasing our knowledge in areas which add value and enhance our ability to positively and creatively pass time), yet you were incapable of absorbing anything more intelligent than what your comment pathetically says about your insecurity and shallowness. ** Thanks for the video! I've been wanting to find a way to accomplish this to make self-watering herb planters out of wine/champagne bottles from bottles I've been collecting for years from special and memorable occasions over the years for a windowsill herb garden all year long, yet have been reluctant to use some of the more dangerous methods, being a woman with no experience with a blowtorch/saw blade, etc. I took a couple to a lady who etches glass and paid for results not nearly as nice as yours, so I'm looking forward to experimenting on a bottle with no sentimental value, as it's always more fulfilling and fun to complete the entire process one's self! :) I look forward to learning from some more of your posts as it looks like you've quite a lot of amazing info to share! Thanks for sharing! :)
@@lir2670 It’s an informative video for crying out loud! Geez! Go watch some more advanced videos on the subject. This guy’s trying to educate people that have never done this before. Just move on and quit bitching.
Half the reason I cut bottles it to get the top half for kitchen FUNNELS. You can make a graduated set, tiny Tabasco, up to gallon jar sized with this method. Thanks. Using my tile saw gave me sloppier results or just shattered the bottle.
cut and (kat) is pronounced the same as in Afrikaans. Though kat in Afrikaans is actually a cat as in English..so when he mentioned cut and the cat appeared it was really bizarre to me
I have looked at every bloody video of how to do it, and I've broken more bottles and glasses than you've had hot meals! Thank you for showing us... Great job, Cheers Sean
I'm guessing at least that 1% or 2% of the time that this method fails is because of a flaw in the glass, not in the technique. The most important part of this tip is to not overscore the glass. It seems counter-intuitive, but it's the same with cutting tile with a manual tile cutter: if you score it several times, the tile is more likely to shatter than to break on the line.
For less then $45 you can buy a used tile cutting saw and that works better then these ways.
5 років тому+3
I have (1976, Penngrove, Ca) used nothing but a wire heated to red hot (by connection to a large power transformer), circled around the bottle. I cut one inch rings from bottles. These rings were melted into flat rings in a kiln. Used to make wind chimes.
He's ALMOST got it right. After cutting hundreds of bottles I have found that 1. You need boiling water, 2. A bucket of ice water. 3. Rubber O rings. I got them from the hardware store and they make different sizes, the larger ones obviously for the wine bottles. I have a hot water maker with a pointed spout, I slide the o rings on both sides the score. ( this concentrates the boiling water directly onto the score. while turning the bottle by the neck of the bottle I pour the hot water directly onto the score. For medium thickness glass I do this for 20 seconds, for thicker glass like Grey Goose bottles 30 seconds while turning the bottle. Then I immediately dip the bottle neck first into the ice water. When you put it in neck first this creates pressure with in the bottle and this actually helps to separate the glass. I have a success rate of about 80% using this method.
Roger, what type of glass cutter do you recommend. I see so many online, but I am not sure of the quality.
I I have 2 that I use The Green thing that fits in the top (Mouth) of the bottle and you score around the bottle. Got it at Hobby Lobby, it was pretty cheap at the time. (I can't remember the exact name of it) The one thing you have to remember with this one is to apply equal pressure throughout the entire score or the score could come out uneven, This is a good bottle cutter but does take some practice to get it right. Another one that is on the market is the Bindu. this is the type where you lay the bottle onto plastic wheels and turn the bottle. They have a website where you can order it, I I think a couple of years ago I paid 50 bucks for it. The Bindu takes less practice. In all cases make sure you wear gloves when scoring the bottles, I have had a few come apart in my hand, luckily I wasn't cut but very easily could have been.
It's called "Generation Green" Bottle cutter.
The burning string method is fine as long as you have a belt sander to finish it.
@@MrCountrycuz id imagine you realistically could even hand sand with a sheet on a flat surface & being patient
why is there so many haters in bad comments on this guy he's not trying to sell anything to anybody he's just simply giving people the general idea of who may want a hobby you people need to lay off men watch it enjoy it or don't simply my opinion
One of the best videos about cutting glass bottles.
Skip to 4:15 to see the cutting process
Skip to 6:32 to see the splitting process
I recommend watching all from minute 4:00
My mom cut bottles back in the 70s. She said you'd use the lightest pressure, just enough to disrupt the surface, and only slightly overlapping. Then she'd use a candle to slightly warm one side, (and only one side, other side she'd have a wet dish towel on the other side) and a flick of her finger. The tops would just pop off. The "cut" was so incredibly clean, every time. Often have a hard time even seeing the cut. She'd even do spirals, dips and other shapes. Imagine instead of cutting around, she'd cut vertical lines, along the length. Sorta kinda like a rounded off sawtooth pattern. My dad also made her a device that used electricity to do the breaks, and another device that did the same job, just a different way.(no heat of any kind) both were instant.
Maybe your mum could do a video and upload to youtube?
I would definatly watch that !! ✌🏻❤
I just purchased a bottle cutter with wheels and glass cutter, In their video, they use the hot water and cold method. As in your video, it works perfectly. I thank you for confirming that this method works. I'm now reassured I made the right decision.
Stop by a a local bar or cidery. Ask them if you can have a box of their empty bottles. Tell them you're practicing glass cutting IF THEY ASK. Dont tell them, if they dont ask. They might charge you for them. Happy cutting to you!
This is the most informative and helpful video on this subject that I have seen. I took your method and then came up with a way of doing it pretty quickly. I boiled a pot of water and kept it on the range at a nice boil. I had several bottles scored. As you mentioned, just one time around with a light score... Then I laid the scored bottle on top of the boiling water and rolled it for a bit. Once I figured it was good and heated, I took it to my sink. I ran cold water over the outside score line all the way around, then filled the bottle with the cold H20. The stress line is then cooled outside and inside. The bottom of the bottle falls out when I'm filling it (and keeping the bottle as close to the bottom of the sink as possible). I had placed a wooden cutting board in the bottom of the sink to prevent the bottom piece from breaking when it drops out. Perfect cut line! I then took another bottle, and repeated the process over and over because I still had boiling water on the range and plenty of scored bottles ready. If the bottle doesn't cut the first time around while being cooled at the sink I just stick it back in the boiling water and it snaps right off. I think having even heating and cooling around the circumference of the bottle also helps to ensure you get a nice clean cut. Thank you, thank you, and thanks again. I had given up on the process till I ran across your video.
My mom bought a bottle cutter in the 70's. After a few projects with soda and beer bottles she quit it and sold it cheap to someone else. She basically made a few soda and beer glasses but even after sanding them everyone was afraid to drink from them because of the glass being able to be rubbed off.
The next thing she bought was a rock polisher. That was around and in use for quite awhile longer. 70's project tools were fun enough but going picnicking at a dam , reservoir or lake had much more appeal.
Edit:
She wanted to make stemware from the tops but never got around to it. So her following project was make " tuits " in circular shapes...and would hand them to people after they would mention that they need to get around to it, to get something going. She would reach into her purse and hand them one little paper circle and say " there you go ". They would ask what it is or why she handed it to them. She would say, " you said you just needed to get a round tuit and I just handed you one. You knew when it happened because you would hear an exasperated voice moaning " Lydia ! " and my mom laughing really hard.
What a great story about your mom! I’m going to copy that, people still say that all the time 😂
Thanks for sharing! Great idea!
I tried, with disastrous results, to cut a bottle with my 4" angle grinder with a diamond blade on it. Hands down, that is the coolest trick I've seen yet. Better still, you showed all the flaws in the "tried" methods, and gave me a working procedure for cutting my bottles. Thanks
Just cut my very first bottle using this method. Followed the steps exactly and got a perfect cut. I love that the only 'specialty' item needed is the glass scorer. Thanks for the great info.
Excellent video and commentary! Thanks so much! Please ignore the jerks who feel compelled to criticize you.
I totally agree
This is absolutely brilliant. thanks for being so generous with your hard-earned trial and error knowledge!
I just tried this method about 20 minutes ago. I have never cut a bottle in my life but my first, and only 2 wine bottles that I used this method with came out PERFECT. Thanks Dan for such an awesome idea. my mom has about 100 bottles she wants to do projects with and you just saved us a lot of time.
I just tried your method to break bottles, and I have to say it is the best and quickest. I only sumerged the bottles in iced water to make the impact even stronger.
I love that "why" is the first thing you say to your cat when he meows.
TBH I thought I was the only one 😂
Lol Ive done that 😂😁
I'd say, "you gotts score your own tail"!
The cat jumped up right as I read this
Great video. Best technique I’ve seen. It works really well. Instead of buying a bottle cutting jig I screwed my glass cutter to my workbench and attached two pieces of 2 by 4 to the bench as well for positive stops for each bottle. Pulley adjustable. Cost me nada. Thanks for technique.
I've just had to cut hundreds of bottles for a home project. I started with a rotary cutter which took ten minutes per bottle. I then found this video, and was able to cut each in less than 20 seconds. I owe you weeks of my life, thank you for this video! So much simpler than the ice cube and burning thread methods..
The best video I've seen so far for cutting glass bottles, and you have explained all the mistakes I did my first tries. Excellent job!
I use a cheap Harbor Freight wet saw with a diamond blade. Makes perfectly smooth cuts in any glass bottle. My thing is guitar slides.
@@theyoungupstarts1243 no, from the belly...big fingers..
Green bottles and especially wine or champagne bottles are great for beginners and learning the process. Clear glass and thin walled beer bottles require more experience. The thinner glass on beer bottles have many inconsistencies so the thermal stressing process requires a bit of skill.
Stunning! I'm very impressed! Finally the correct and proper way to separate a glass bottle. Thank you Dan for sharing your knowledge.
Un Believable!! Great!! Amazing!! You are a ROCKSTAR!!
Thanks so much for sharing Dan!
Scott Frank Thank you for the nice comment Scott!
Amazing! It worked perfectly! My only feedback: Rather than a sink I used a large boiling pot of water and a large bowl of ice water. I used a measuring cup to pour boiling water over the bottle then I used a measuring cup to pour ice water over the bottle. I was able to control the final cracking so the wine bottle broke in the ice water.
Thank you for this video!
You are the first I've seen that recommended safety eyewear. thanks for that.
Your system works. I used it last weekend while making beer bottle guitar slides. In the past I would dunk the bottle in boiling water--with mixed results. Your video shows a better way. Thanks.
I am finally able to cut a glass bottle!!!! U are genius!! Much simple and easy way to cut! Save water save energy!
Thanks for a great video. You've covered all the methods of cutting a bottle and saved me a lot of trial and error (and bottles). Another fine example of "Internet Intelligence".
+Richard Reynolds Thank you Richard!
If you keep a Styrofoam sheet in the bottom of the sink when you pour water over it, you can prevent the top from breaking when it falls off. :)
I wanted to do some projects with wine bottles for sometimes now but was too intimidated to cut it myself. I have watched a few videos but something about yours gave me the confidence to do it and have a clean cut. I am getting ready to buy it a bottle cutter today. Thank you. By the way I loved the cat, it was like comic relief. I laughed my head off.
My daughter bought me a bottle cutter some years ago. It cost about $10. She bought it at an arts & craft store and its quick and allot easier than any of the ways you've shown. I've used it for years on all kinds of bottles and never had a problem.
Where can i get one
@@desmondthomas4531
I would think at any arts & crafts store. It was awhile back,but I imagine that Hobby Lobby or at Micheals. Micheals is where my daughter bought mine. If I
find out, I'll pass it on to you.
Best I've seen, and very generous of you to share this technique. Thanks so much
Agreed 👍🏻
Still the best tutorial and explanation after all these years.
Your hands down best I seen. Saw all videos of guys doing what you show not to do. Results all the same, jagged edges and unacceptable sloppy breaks. You had the cleanest , near perfect breaks out of all videos I found. Sweet technique thanks for lesson.
This should be the only video on how to do this. I wish I'd seen this when I first researched this topic.
Thank you for this!
Ditto.. I'm exhausted lol
Used to cut bottles a lot when I was a kid, using the bottle cutter you have. I used the tapper it came with to break the tops off, and seldom got a clean break. Later I learned about using a candle and that was better, but still unpredictable. If I'd'a known your technique, I'd've got the results I was looking for. Too bad there was no Internet in the 70s. Thanks for the video!
You used that kids glass thing every one got for Christmas making drinking glasses by Boxing Day down hospital for stitches wish I thought of wax before
I was searching on UA-cam and I almost gave up ... Fortunately I found your video. Thank you.
I have a project for biology that required me to cut a few wine bottles in half and your technique really helped me out, thanks
Best bottle cutting video I've found. Thank you for the great information and your time!
Awesome technique ! Was wanting to make guitar slides, so I got out my glass cutter from 1969, same one you used. But I had forgot my skill of cutting a clean edge. Will try your method ! Thank you.
Did you ever find a good way to make the slides? I want to do the same.
Very cool, thanks for the great tip. About 50 years ago my grandfather taught me to to use the flaming string method. Your method is obviously much better. It just goes to prove that sometimes a gentle touch is better than a lot of force.
I have tried this method and it WORKS !! I use a wood lathe. I find a set of chuck jaws that will fit the base of the bottle, be it a beer bottle or a wine bottle. I then install my live center in the tail stock to receive the mouth of the bottle. I set up the tool rest with two pieces of wood to center the glass cutter between them and hold it exactly perpendicular to the lathe axis (center). I then score the bottle once around, being careful not to double score. As this video instructs, I then pour boiling water SLOWLY over the bottle at the score (in the sink) as I rotate it. I then hold the scored bottle under a small stream of cold water from the sink faucet. Sometimes it takes two doses, but at some point the sides just separate noiselessly and cleanly. Beer bottles are more difficult because they usually have a seam of thicker glass that runs parallel to the bottle's axis. The method still works but sometimes that seam needs some sanding. Wine bottles work great.
FIRST 5,000,000 view video!
GREENPOWERSCIENCE Congrats on 5M views
Way to go GREENPOWERSCIENCE !
Did you ever made the video on how to make the wine cutter with a regular one? I want to make a chandelier but I can only find the regular glass cutter at home depit.
GREENPOWERSCIENCE Hey dude, is it possible to reseal the bottle with glue after you cut it and make the score line invisible?
I'd really appreciate a response.
SuperElite27000000 Yes it is possible. I do it all the time as you can see here at www.LucidLightLamps.com The score line will be virtually invisible if you get a nice clean bottle separation and use the proper technique to bond the bottle back together. In order to get a perfectly clean cut you might need to try this bottle cutting process: ua-cam.com/video/QE28BZPcX9A/v-deo.htmlrel=0
Worked exactly as demonstrated. I appreciated the explanation of how it works, too.
Wow, this 14 year old video is the best I have found on the bottle cutting subject. I seems to have done everything wrong on my first bottle cutting experiment :D
I usually use water to cut bottles. Tried your method of pouring the water slowly and 20 out of 22 bottles have been successfully cut perfectly!!!!!!
I've tried dozens of times and could never get a clean break. First time up after seeing this and boom ! Thanks a lot
Not bad, but I have gotten even cleaner cuts _with no scoring in advance_ by wrapping a *nichrome wire* almost all the way around the bottle/jar and applying a large current through the wire to produce *very concentrated thermal stress.* The wire needs to be fed through a heavy conductor like small copper tubes to prevent the part of the wire not in contact with glass from overheating. Getting the power level right is important, and the wire should not be too thin nor too thick. Something like 1/5 to 1/10 the thickness of the glass seems good.
Just tried this technique and it worked perfect. Thanks
I make stained glass and this by far is the best version I’ve seen online for cutting a curved glass. Good job 😁👍🏼
Asking "what?" To the cat and the cat responding makes this video gold!
just 1 thing. the vacuum u create when u place yr hand on top stops the leak not the pressure. excellent job. thanks
I'm a tiler and use a fine abrasive glass diamond blade in a wet saw for cutting glass mosaic. It also cuts bottles perfectly.
Is this equipment expensive? Do you have recommendations? Should I as a novice try this? Thanks!! 😎
Awesome job! Besides loving how nearly perfect that cut is, there are 2 other things that really impress me. One, is that you did it using simple tools that everyone would either already have or could get, AND USE, very easily (the glass cutting tool), and second, that ALL the "experts" said you're never going to get a perfect cut, AND YOU PROVED THEM WRONG AND FOUND A WAY TO DO IT. For everybody that is afraid to do something differently, or to even TRY, because you think that there CAN'T be a better way to do whatever it is, DARE TO BE DIFFERENT AND PROVE THEM WRONG. Just because everyone has been making a wheel the same way for thousands of years (okay, maybe not thousands), that doesn't mean you can't find a BETTER way. LOVE, LOVE LOVE THIS!
after watching this a couple times threw and trying it each time, i figured out that i was getting the bottle to hot and it was cracking the side of the bottle. after i did what the video says, lightly heat bottle with hot water then cool, add a little hot water, it snapped correctly, thank you.
yes he knows what he talking about .works great only thing i could add is [lease remove the screw down lid the pressure was enough to blow it up in 20 peaces and it was a thick bottle !throw away lid .that way your heart won't try to jump out threw back bones ! took 10 yr's off my life span ! good to ya all.
I have a simple glass scoring plate that I use. Then I use hot & cold water alternately and get near perfect results almost every time. Happy to see a video that shows the same. I liked for the info but I subbed for the cat. 👀😁
Your bottle cutting method is awesome. I did modify my old Stanley thermos for exacting pour over the cut line.
1. Drilled 1/16 hole in lid for air vent.
2. Drilled 1/8 hole and installed 1/8 brass tubing for precision pour. I also rolled the edge of the tubing to keep water flowing even like a faucet. Please note, any small diameter of tubing will work. Like metal brake line
Thank you John, I will give that a try. Makes sense, great idea!!!
Yea, our first 6 Million view video! Thank you to everyone who has enjoyed and shared this video!!!
congratulations!, a very informative and inspiring video, as they all are!
Can that cutter be extended so I can cut near the bottom instead?
GREENPOWERSCIENCE
I made a bottle cutter by making a v-box you can lay the bottle in on its side with a glass cutter screwed down; scored a line; then used a nichrome wire in a circuit to heat it red hot. put the wire around the score line hit the power for a few seconds and the top falls off.
The trick my father and I used to open radio tubes was a trigger type soldering gun , we removed the tip and used a piece of bare 12 guage copper wire long enough to wrap around the glass , turning the glass as the wire is heating up . The progressive heat and vibration of the wire scoring the glass came out perfect every time 👍
The wire from old electric toasters did similar with 24vDC
@@davidgraemesmith1980 Yes but my mom would have shot my dad for taking apart the toaster to cut the radio tubes so I could build a FM receiver in the tubes for my 6 th. grade science fair project , LoL
@JASON VOORHEES I'm currently retired but I used to do air-conditioning, building maintenance and remodeling. Physics, electro chemistry, and electronics have been a hobby since grade school.
@JASON VOORHEES The radio tubes we were opening where for my sixth grade science fair project , building an FM radio on the leads inside the tubes , was a spin off of micro chip construction.
@JASON VOORHEES You can get a dual temperature trigger type soldering gun from Harbor freight for under twenty dollars , but as a make shift device , find an old laptop charger . They usually run 12 - 14 Volt's DC at around 1.2 to 2.5 amps which is enough to heat resistance wire like Toaster wire , but you may want to use a reostat ( variable resistor ) or make one to control the heat so you don't shatter the glass.
Years ago they sold a wine bottle cutter and then you could use the top as a base for fancy stemware! Thank You for this video
Aha! My method was too sudden with the hot water... slowly seems to be the key. It works now!! Thanks! Now I need to get more bottles! I wish I could show a pic of how easy it is.
Get a tile saw. $29 wet saw from harbor freight. Takes a few seconds to do
Bon Jovi has a UA-cam channel?! AND he’s a glass cutting expert? The wonders never cease.
Please provide link to Bon's UA-cam channel where you viewed the glass cutting.
@@mocandie … you’re joking, right?
You are a true expert in glass. You know the properties of glass like no one I've seen out there.
This is the best video and the best method I've seen.
Thanks for your work and sharing with us.
Put an elastic band each side of the score line. It will put the water exactly in the right place, hot then cold.
Unfortunately not my idea, can't remember who told me.
Super, thanks for the straight forward and simple info! Been wanting to cut a bottle that got stuck into one of my terra cotta watering cups.. they are not coming apart so I need the bottom cut off the soda bottle. Why should I break a good bottle? Thanks again!
I got one of those glass cutters at very young age "Score then tap tap tap"
They never came out worth A crap.I will try this.
Dan, you are a genius. The magnetic bearing, the solar death ray, and now this, the most delicate of all observations. Keep going forever please.
Best tutorial I have seen so far thanks xx
This has been used for years by people in the know. Another very important piece of information is that you never go over a score line. It dulls the carbon steel cutting wheel. You use steady pressure and listen. Once you go all the way around and the score line connects you stop.
back in the 70s it was all the rage :) we had a lot of fun making things ... good times :)
The wheel on the cutter is not sharp at all and I don’t hear any scoring sound. If I look at the bottle I can’t even see that it’s scoring all the way around. What is the problem?
@@daviddewitt9365 the wheel doesn't have to be sharp. It just has to be harder than the glass. And if you don't hear it score you aren't using enough pressure. The cutting is considered dull if it skips. Never go over a score line it puts minute imperfections in the wheel that will cause it to skip while you try to score the glass.
@@briannelms5853 Thank you so much! Nobody ever explains this including the instructions in the bottle cutter device that I bought ...
Being a glazier for 35 yrs now,there's one way & only one way to a perfect cut every time & this is where ever the cutter finishes is the place you need to tap or apply pressure as quickly as you can because believe it or not the cut becomes cold the longer you leave it thus more often than not a uneven cut or a broken cut
Very cool bottle cutting method. Nice breakdown of failed methods, and explanation as to how you arrived at your method.
This is the link to the cutter with the best cutting wheel available designed for round glass.
greenpowerscience.com/BOTTLECUTTING.php3
GREENPOWERSCIENCE great info. Thanks
I have been playing slide for over 30 years.
Using other methods on UA-cam I used over 15 bottles I got 4 that will work.
Doing it this way that Dan shows here, I had 3 bottles left, and I got 3 out of 3.....
you can use the neck or mouth of the wine bottle and bury most of it beside your baby tomatoe plants so you can directly water your plant and save water
I made a glass guitar-slide using this method! It really works.
-And, I didn't even need that fancy bottle-scoring rig.
I simply, carefully used a regular glass-scoring knife.
~Thanks!
Great job explaining how, Top Level!
Thanks. 👏🏼✊🏼🙏🏼
I like how you are using your finger to cover up the part of rim that isn't flat :P 7:22
+SR212787 looks pretty flat at 7:17 after it breaks.....
+Jimmy Sharp He covered up the part that wasn't flat. I slowed down the video to .025 and it was there.
+SR212787 yeah I saw it too. But still, this was one example. And that 30sec cut was already worth 50 of the last bottles I cut so who cares. His method is superior.
I "like" how your entire existence is clearly so pathetically miserable and meaningless that you had the time to spend watching such a creative and useful video (shared FREELY and generously to those of us who appreciate increasing our knowledge in areas which add value and enhance our ability to positively and creatively pass time), yet you were incapable of absorbing anything more intelligent than what your comment pathetically says about your insecurity and shallowness. ** Thanks for the video! I've been wanting to find a way to accomplish this to make self-watering herb planters out of wine/champagne bottles from bottles I've been collecting for years from special and memorable occasions over the years for a windowsill herb garden all year long, yet have been reluctant to use some of the more dangerous methods, being a woman with no experience with a blowtorch/saw blade, etc. I took a couple to a lady who etches glass and paid for results not nearly as nice as yours, so I'm looking forward to experimenting on a bottle with no sentimental value, as it's always more fulfilling and fun to complete the entire process one's self! :) I look forward to learning from some more of your posts as it looks like you've quite a lot of amazing info to share! Thanks for sharing! :)
+SR212787 your a nitshit, do us a favor and dont breed children
Who else saw the imperfection he hid with his finger 😂😂
Yep !! I was actually waiting for the drop of blood.
That has tho be the best way i ever seen to break the round bottles without having shards and pieces flying everywhere. Thank you for this video .
I was getting aggravated, saying 'just get to it, will ya' and then I saw the cat. I'm glad I didn't fast forward. Love that cat.
ja jane yeah, this video had about one whole minute of actually useful info. I just skipped through until I found it.
wiljee that too :/
@@lir2670 It’s an informative video for crying out loud! Geez! Go watch some more advanced videos on the subject. This guy’s trying to educate people that have never done this before. Just move on and quit bitching.
For the info; watch 3:40 - 4:40 and 5:50 - 7:20
Half the reason I cut bottles it to get the top half for kitchen FUNNELS. You can make a graduated set, tiny Tabasco, up to gallon jar sized with this method. Thanks. Using my tile saw gave me sloppier results or just shattered the bottle.
Watched this at 10:00 pm, made a rig and cut my first bottle by 11pm, not quite even but a sticker messed up my cut.
Thanks a lot! Great method.
cut and (kat) is pronounced the same as in Afrikaans. Though kat in Afrikaans is actually a cat as in English..so when he mentioned cut and the cat appeared it was really bizarre to me
Good video!!. Thanks .maybe also wear Gloves for beginners .
I use gallon costco pickle jars for terrarium
Every video on this channel I watch, I'm non-stop impressed!
Nice 😉 never give up till you figure it put perfectly 😉
COVID-19 drinking should BOOST the views here.
Sooooooo much safer than flammable materials and fire.
I have looked at every bloody video of how to do it, and I've broken more bottles and glasses than you've had hot meals! Thank you for showing us... Great job, Cheers Sean
I'm guessing at least that 1% or 2% of the time that this method fails is because of a flaw in the glass, not in the technique. The most important part of this tip is to not overscore the glass. It seems counter-intuitive, but it's the same with cutting tile with a manual tile cutter: if you score it several times, the tile is more likely to shatter than to break on the line.
The cat was the highlight. He deserved more love.. >:(
couln't agree more😄😄😍😍
Is that a strategically placed finger or thumb covering a slight error on the cut edge?
Great video - I am a wedding planner and have to cut 36 wine bottles for centerpieces. Thanks for saving me tons of time.
I am getting perfect cuts and use the candle heating method. Work great for me all the time ✌
For less then $45 you can buy a used tile cutting saw and that works better then these ways.
I have (1976, Penngrove, Ca) used nothing but a wire heated to red hot (by connection to a large power transformer), circled around the bottle. I cut one inch rings from bottles. These rings were melted into flat rings in a kiln. Used to make wind chimes.
Brilliant! For people making self watering planters you can check out other UA-cam videos but this kind of cut is exactly what you need!