Ironton Heavy-Duty 130W Hot Knife w/ Adjustable Blade
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$13.50
$29.99
+ Free Shipping
+43Deal Score
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Northern Tool & Equipment has Ironton Heavy-Duty 130W Hot Knife w/ Adjustable Blade on sale for $13.49. Shipping is free or choose store pickup where stock permits.
Thanks to Deal Hunter Rokket for finding this deal.
Product Description:
The Ironton Heavy-Duty Hot Knife quickly heats to 975°F to make fast, clean cuts in foam and plastic materials. The hot knife comes with a depth adjustment to make repeat cuts or long cuts at a precise depth.
130 Watt, 110V hot knife
Has 3 3/7" to 5 1/2" adjustable blade
Adjustable temperature up to 975°F
Ideal for cutting foam, plastic, webbing, synthetic fabrics, and nylon rope
Northern Tool via eBay[ebay.com] also has the Ironton Heavy-Duty Hot Knife 110V, Adjustable Blade on sale for $13.49. Shipping is free. > OOS
Product Description:
The Ironton Heavy-Duty Hot Knife quickly heats to 975°F to make fast, clean cuts in foam and plastic materials. The hot knife comes with a depth adjustment to make repeat cuts or long cuts at a precise depth.
130 Watt, 110V hot knife
Has 3 3/7" to 5 1/2" adjustable blade
Adjustable temperature up to 975°F
Ideal for cutting foam, plastic, webbing, synthetic fabrics, and nylon rope
Description: "Has 3 3/7" to 5 1/2" adjustable blade".
What kind of wild non-conformist measures in 7ths of an inch? smh
Come on, old timer, get with it. Everyone these days is measuring in 7ths. A 7th is the new 8th, odd numbers are the new even numbers, we're using stones to measure weight, and for volume everything is measured in terms of the 1.5 quart (a gallon jug is now a two-and-two-thirds 1.5 quart jug).
Or maybe it was just a typo.
If you happen to be building an ICF construction house, this is the cleanest way to make cutouts for electrical outlet, switch, and other boxes in the wall. This, and a small electric chainsaw with a depth guide, can do 90% of the wire work in ICF walls.
other than cutting and fusing nylon rope, hasn't most cutting tasks been superseded by the oscillating multitool?
just asking because the shed is quite full
other than cutting and fusing nylon rope, hasn't most cutting tasks been superseded by the oscillating multitool?
just asking because the shed is quite full
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank OmahaJeff
01-25-2023 at 11:26 AM.
Quote
from amm888
:
I'm thinking of getting this for cutting slabs of beeswax into smaller pieces. Any thoughts on this from those familiar with this tool?
Yes, that would work just fine at lower temperatures. If you turn the temperature up much you're going to quickly reach the smoking point of the wax, smoke yourself out and also char the edges of the cut.
You could even (very carefully) sharpen one of the edges to make for a cleaner, more minimal cut. This tool is typically used to "melt" cut through material, but I suspect you want a minimum of mess and waste of wax, so slow physically cutting with a heated tool should work best for your purpose I believe.
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What kind of wild non-conformist measures in 7ths of an inch? smh
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What kind of wild non-conformist measures in 7ths of an inch? smh
Or maybe it was just a typo.
I have seen graters used on YT,
Planning on replacing my car seat foam and covers in the Summer.
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just asking because the shed is quite full
Now adding random characters to make the message long enough for SD bot to accept.
wojerwqe-p] 0 ri osdjugf[ps cdvfp'oujsfgsdxf[gopfgpfsdkgjksfd
just asking because the shed is quite full
huh? This ISN'T a TA chat room?
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank OmahaJeff
You could even (very carefully) sharpen one of the edges to make for a cleaner, more minimal cut. This tool is typically used to "melt" cut through material, but I suspect you want a minimum of mess and waste of wax, so slow physically cutting with a heated tool should work best for your purpose I believe.