Tom:  I've only tried using rotozip bits on a drill press with disasterous
results, so I'm curious about how you use yours.  I have a friend who says
he uses one of these, but he I think just puts a bit in a high speed drill
and cuts freehand.  So, is there a shoe on your tool that allows you to
follow a fence or jig?

Thanks for any illumination.

 

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Tom Hodges
Sent: Thursday, January 07, 2010 08:30
To: [email protected]
Subject: [BlindHandyMan] RotoZip

 

  

Someone was inquiring about using the roto zip for cutting wood the other
day and I have since deleted them. However, I had occasion to use mine
yesterday to cut wood and here is the result.

I'm tearing out an old closet and building a new one in a 100 year old
house. The exterior wall is brick, inside and out. I had to remove the old
baseboard from the wall in the new closet section only so I could put in a
new one all around the interior of the closet. I put a wood cutting bit
into the Roto Zip and adjusted it to the thickness of the baseboard, which
was a full, one inch thick and seven and a half inches high. I cut it to
about a quarter inch from the floor in about 30 seconds and chiseled the
remaining quarter inch.

It worked beautifully. Prior to this, I had only used my Roto Zip for
cutting drywall. The trick to using the Roto Zip would be to use the right
bit for the material being cut. The drywall bit will definetly not cut
wood.

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