A reader sent in a tip about a new iQ Power Tools tile saw, the iQ228Cyclone. (Thank you Fred!) After reviewing its features, the iQ228Cyclone – a 7″ dry-cutting tile saw – looks to be more interesting than at first glance.
iQ Power Tools says that their new iQ228 Cyclone, which I’ll simply refer to as the iQ228 is the world’s first 7″ dry cut tabletop saw with integrated table saw.
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In other words, it’s a small tile saw that can be used dry and without water.
iQ Power Tools says this saw allows you to lose the water! and cut dry without the mess.
How does it do this?
The iQ228 has 3 main dust control features:
- Dust filter
- filters fine particulates, must be spun 3X a day
- Vacuum motor
- 15A motor powers the saw and vacuum
- Cyclones
- 4 cyclones pull dust and debris into the dust tub
What about overheating?
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iQ Power Tools says that their “cool cut technology Q-drive blade” has a proprietary composition of diamond concentration, metal type, and flange thickness that cuts cool while reducing vibration and movement.
In other words, use their special blades and everything will be fine.
iQ Power Tools doesn’t specify the blade cutting speed of their new iQ228 Cyclone tile saw.
My guess is that iQ Power Tools might have also dialed in a lower motor speed. Slower speeds often means cooler cutting. That, combined with their special blades, might make cutting heat more manageable.
A downside to all this is that the iQ228 does not seem to have bevel controls, a feature found on other brands’ wet-cutting 7″ benchtop tile saws.
The iQ228 tile saw has a “Tru-Cut System” for accurate cut measurements, with 1″ increments, and the fence is adjustable with 1/16″ increments.
The iQ228 has a 1.25″ depth of cut, 18″ max rip cut with the rolling table, and 24″+ max rip cut without the rolling table.
The rolling table looks to functional similarly to a miter sled.
It has a side-carry handle and is said to weigh 36 pounds.
Let’s review the main iQ228 selling points:
- Tabletop size
- 7″ blade
- Water-free cutting
- Built-in dust control
There are a couple of potential downsides:
- Will replacement filters be readily available?
- Filter must be spun “3X a day”
- No bevel adjustment
- Proprietary blades
Price: $599
ETA: April 2021
Features & Specs
- 7″ proprietary blade
- 1.25″ depth of cut
- 18″ max rip cut w/ sled, 24″+ without
- Weighs 36 lbs
- 15A motor
- Speed: unknown
- Includes a combination blade and fence
Discussion
I don’t do much tile work – please keep this in mind and correct me if I’m wrong.
Why do tile saws usually require water?
Well, for one, water cools the blade. It’s an almost universal truth that a cooler blade lasts longer. Cutting hard materials – and really most materials and not just tile – creates friction, and friction creates heat.
Water also helps to eliminate the creation of dust.
Water moves cut material away from the blade.
There might be other benefits, but generally a water slurry allows for a smoother cut, lower amounts of airborne dust, and a cooler blade.
The iQ Power Tools iQ228 Cyclone tile saw has a built-in vacuum and filter that removes cut material fragments, helps to reduce airborne dust, and the airflow could assist in cooling the blade.
iQ talks up their special Q-Drive blades with special “cool cut tech,” which are supposed to stay cool to the touch without water.
There’s no slurry messiness or water to deal with.
But… you do have to take care of the filter. iQ Power Tools doesn’t go into details, but says it needs to be “spun” several times a day. It looks like there’s a knob on the side of the saw, and as you rotate the filter it hits up against a tab that knocks dust and debris off the filter fins.
The saw is designed differently than other tabletop tile saws, such as with no bevel adjustment range.
The same motor powers the blade and vacuum function, which seems practical.
Based on the product image, there are 3 separate dust collection stages:
- Large cut-off area where slivers can simply fall through
- Cyclone area where coarser particulates are separated out
- Filtered area where fine particulates are collected
iQ Power Tools doesn’t make any claims as to how effective the 3-stage dust management is compared to wet tile saws.
iQ says that the iQ228 produces “X CFM and collects 99.5% of the dust,” but I have a hard time believing it collects more than a wet tile saw would.
As mentioned, they also don’t provide or publicize blade cutting speed.
Here’s a question – what happens when fine particulates start to clog up the filter? Will cutting speed be impacted because the same motor is used for the blade and vacuum dust collection?
Is there a timer or other such indicator to let you know when it’s time to spin the filter clean? Or, will you simply know it’s time to clean the motor mid-job.
The iQ228Cyclone seems like an interesting concept, but is it really going to be less of a hassle to work with than a compact or benchtop tile saw?
There’s also no mention of noise levels. I would assume that a dry-cutting tile saw would be louder than a wet tile saw.
You still have dust to clean up, but I would think that the 3-stage dust control system could hold at least as much dust as the slurry a similarly sized wet tile saw could contain.
Is the iQ228 louder than a wet tile saw? Does it cut as cleanly? Is it slower than a wet tile saw? Will the special 7″ Q-Drive saw blades be easily available? Will a variety of compatible blades be available?
I don’t know how important having bevel cutting capabilities are in a saw this size, but some of those other factors seem to be important considerations.
If you use wet tile saws regularly, do you think the iQ228 is an upgrade over a typical 7″ wet tile saw?
Tim
Their dust extractor is pure insanity.
Rafe
iQ has been making dry tile saws for a long time, this is just the first one that has an undermount motor instead of over mount like a typical professional grade tile saw. They are high end expensive machines and well worth the money if you are a proffesional tile installer. This one may be cheaper and fit the niche of what a 7 1/4″ cordless miter saw might do for a carpenter. Cutting bevels is probably >1% of the cutting a tile installer does as well. I can tell you the majority of your concerns are not issues at all with iQ previous models.
alex
From what I’ve seen on Youtube, this seems to work pretty great. One thing I would be afraid though is chipping my tiles. A wet saw really helps with that aspect. And wet cutting is just more fun and comfortable overall than dry cutting in my opinon.
If I were a contractor, I would prefer to have some sort of wet tent instead of using a dry saw but that not always possible so this can be a great solutions in these occasions.
Blythe
I am a contractor that installs a fair amount of tile. There is nothing fun about a wet saw. If you cut outside/in the garage during winter your hands are always freezing. I have to worry about the pump and lines being completely dry before they go back in my trailer.
The tiles need to be dried off after you cut, and I have to use wax pencils so my line doesn’t get washed away, which are a pain in themselves
During winter I set up a wet tent inside with a kiddie pool, 3 mil plastic, and dust containment poles. It’s saves me a lot of time overall, but at the end of the job I have to deal with a bunch of wet plastic and cleaning up everything that is either wet or caked with dried slurry or both.
Lukasz
I had that saw, it’s pretty much bulshit! It’s not accurate, iq company doesn’t reply on emails. Poor quality sliding table, poor quality micro adjusting fance and standard one also poor quality. That saw is definitely NOT WORTH THE MONEY! I returned my saw.
Champs
I’m sure it’s great for lots of institutional repair work. The airport bathroom probably isn’t conveniently near an outside door, water, and an outlet. Besides, they want you doing all that even less than you. Other industries are likely just as sensitive, if not as likely to see that kind of abuse.
Stuart
Very good point! The portability likely helps there too. Or, I can see the benefit in taking this on-site where a larger wet saw might not fit and going back and forth to a separate setup might be too far or great of a hassle.
John
Don’t understand Champs comment. Airport bathrooms have water and outlets. So using a wet saw seems quite simple.
Stuart
I believe he’s saying that for repair work, something like this might be particularly quicker and easier to use, and with less potential mess in certain settings.
Airport bathrooms can be quite large, and so the work might not be very close to a sink for accessible water.
Dave P
Been cutting backsplash tile all day using a little Rigid that uses water of course. Other than keeping it under roof and keeping the pump inside if below freezing, this thing has had no real care and it just goes and goes, using any old cutting wheel that I can find in the bargain bin.
One the dust goes into the slurry, it’s not in my house or in my lungs, and once I’m done, I just dump the water out.
Pat
And that little rigid saw has the worst fence system on the market => very poor accuracy.
Haven’t seen a good tiler using rigid yet…
It’s for DYIer like Ryobi…