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I bought my own Guillotine and still have all my fingers!

 
master rocket scientist
Posts: 6613
Location: latitude 47 N.W. montana zone 6A
3499
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This morning I tried out my new cool tool...
A brick guillotine!  Who knew such a tool was out there?  (Thousands of bricklayers are all saying I do)
Well, this Montana hillbilly had never heard of them before last week.
Liz came across a reference to one with no real info, and mentioned that I needed one...
Of course, I searched online and found them right away.
From simple guides that held a chisel and were struck with a hammer, to hydraulic-operated presses that cost several thousand dollars.
I chose one made in America, a heavy-duty lever-action model that works outstandingly.
A Kraft Tool BC582 mini brick splitter is $638 from Amazon. It's not cheap, but it's within reason if you're cutting a lot of brick.
Behind the Dragon tech shop, everything is tinted brick red. Over the last ten years, I have shoveled up bucketfuls of clay dust from my chop saw, cutting thousands of bricks.
Not anymore!  This cuts regular clay brick and some firebrick.  The instructions warned that it was not intended to cut hard firebrick (Super-Duty Firebricks)
The cutting blades are replaceable if I damage one.
My chop saw and diamond blade will still be used for custom cuts that require precision, or the occasional super-duty brick I need to cut.
Most cuts split a full brick into a half brick for bell construction.
The built-in measure makes it easy to create any size piece needed.
Some cuts might require a touch-up with a masonry blade on a grinder, but most will not.
This is silent, fast, easy, and dust-free!










 
20250417_080800.jpg
How it was shipped
How it was shipped
20250417_083147.jpg
getting ready
getting ready
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the first cut
the first cut
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ready to mortar
ready to mortar
 
master steward
Posts: 7377
Location: southern Illinois, USA
2680
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Back in the 60s my brother-in-law was a brick layer. He made his own brick cutter. It was a pretty simple design that functioned by being struck with a heavy hammer.  He tried a car jack, but decided in favor of the speed of a hammer.
 
out to pasture
Posts: 12673
Location: Portugal
3648
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When my son was nine years old, I had a visit from the education inspectors to check that he was receiving an adequate home education.

The next day my husband was doing some building work and asked him to go cut a brick in half for him. My son eagerly grabbed a hammer and brick chisel and ran off with them and a brick. Two deft swipes later he comes back beaming with the brick cut neatly in half.

I was mortified and gave them both strict instructions to never, ever do that if the inspectors come around again as it suggested that he spent far too much time on the farm and not enough in the school-room. I was secretly rather proud of him though...
 
gardener
Posts: 5342
Location: Cincinnati, Ohio,Price Hill 45205
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I guess I assumed you used a tile cutting wet saw.
 
thomas rubino
master rocket scientist
Posts: 6613
Location: latitude 47 N.W. montana zone 6A
3499
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I use a diamond blade to cut soaked bricks on my sliding compound saw.
I still will if I need precision cuts.
This is fast, easy, and creates no dust.
The hammer and chisel method works; professional brick layers use their trowel.
This is foolproof, fast, and...  I have a confession...

My Name is Tom
I am a Tool Whore...

Any Questions?
 
gardener
Posts: 697
Location: VT, zone 5a
318
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Reminds me of a gruesome-looking fiber tool, the Picker. I know someone who has one, but I’ve never used it.

https://duckduckgo.com/?q=fiber+picker&t=ffip&iar=images
 
Posts: 328
Location: North East Iowa, USA
92
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Tom, that really brought back memories, as I used a much wider one but same principal years ago,  ( use a diamond wet saw for most everything now, because of the granite work)

Anyway a short head banging story- I bent down to adjust the brick just slightly, and just reached up to pull down the handle - brick popped as it should, but being I was below the handle, instead of above, well lets say I remember where the handle went.

cheers
 
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