DIY

I’m looking to cut a coffee cup or a teacup in half with a wet tile saw. Does anyone half any recommendations?

I’m looking to cut a coffee cup or a teacup in half with a wet tile saw. Does anyone half any recommendations?

Attached is an example of what I am essentially trying to do

https://i.redd.it/c4ig2w7dwvbf1.jpeg
Reddit

Discussion

Ziff7

Cutting porcelain is more difficult than regular tile. Make sure you have a brand new high quality blade. Also make sure the cup is secured to the cutting tray so it doesn’t wobble around, because that will cause chipping too. You also need to experiment with the right blade speed. Too fast or too slow can cause chipping.

17 hours ago
Squiddlywinks

This might be the only decent comment in the thread.

17 hours ago
1duke-dan

Don’t forget eyewear, there will be shards flying

13 hours ago
Silenthitm4n

Perhaps fill with water and freeze first. Helps keep blade straight and cool, also helps prevent chipping

15 hours ago
Uncomfortably-Dum

Basically, cutting the ice "cube" in half, too? I like this idea. I was thinking of some water, but this i feel would work well.

Maybe not, though. A few test runs would have to do

15 hours ago
Browsing--

Using fresh clay works well. You cover the whole cup with clay,inside and outside. It prevents chipping on the edge too,like tape helps chipping wood when you cut it.

12 hours ago
Thondiac

Fucking brilliant. 👏

11 hours ago
trans_rights1

I think this would work better than ice. I’m worried that the ice would cause a large temperature differential with the saw blade and cause the cup to crack.

7 hours ago
CockroachJohnson

When they make trumpets they fill the brass tubes with soapy water and then freeze them before bending, so they are filled with a low-density ice, it stops the tubes from kinking when they make the bends. Not relevant to this in the least, but your suggestion reminded me of it.

12 hours ago
PyroDesu

I thought they use pitch?

11 hours ago
CockroachJohnson

Perhaps there is more than one way to bend a trumpet.

11 hours ago
BentGadget

That's what my grandma always said. She was full of folksy wisdom.

10 hours ago
ScoutsOut389

It’s a good thing she can’t see us now, all sewed up in horse pies.

10 hours ago
Kelmurdoch

This guy watches How It's Made

10 hours ago
space-cake

Most wet saws pump water already…

13 hours ago
jaa101

The water will expand as it freezes and crack the cup.

14 hours ago
anastis

It’s a cup, not a sealed bottle. Water will expand upwards.

14 hours ago
CockroachJohnson

There are circumstances where this is not true. Often the surface of the water will be the first to freeze, and if it has good cohesion to the rim of the cup the rest of the water will essentially be freezing in a sealed container.

Source: put a mug of liquid in the freezer once and it cracked when the liquid froze.

12 hours ago
SnooObjections488

Could use a non water liquid or a mix. Water is the only liquid that expands as it freezes

14 hours ago
jm838

 Water is the only liquid that expands as it freezes

Not true! OP is going to have a horrible time when they fill the cup with molten bismuth and then it breaks it on freezing.

13 hours ago
SnooObjections488

Bismuth expands too? Google time

Edit:

For anyone interested jt seems to have a pyramid structure and thats why it expands as it solidifies. Similar principles to water scarily enough.

From what I was seeing they can even get it to form square hydrogen bonds of a sort similar to how water likes to make hexagons (6 sides)

13 hours ago
jm838

It’s pretty much a pointless technicality, since its melting point is 520.6°F.

13 hours ago
SnooObjections488

But Stience!

It would be pointless but I did learn something so theres that

13 hours ago
jaa101

Maybe candle wax. The trouble with the whole concept is that any saw is going to create enough heat to melt whatever liquid is used. Water, with its extremely high heat capacity, would melt least but wax will melt easily, despite a higher freezing temperature.

14 hours ago
SnooObjections488

Wax would probably get everywhere.

Maybe a foam or jell to keep shape and cut easily but not melt 🤷‍♂️

13 hours ago
pobodys-nerfect5

Unless they’re about to drop a bit more than a couple hundred bucks for a wet saw I highly doubt they’ll have access to a variable speed.

It’s going to chip no matter what. You’ll want a diamond sanding pad, 220 grit will be acceptable, for after making the cut. The sanding pad will make the edge very clean.

13 hours ago
SirJungle

"Does anyone half any recommendations?"
You sly dog, you. :D

19 hours ago
BigPandaCloud

Looks like my brain just used autocorrect.

17 hours ago
x86_64_

I liked it too

18 hours ago
Brain_Fatigue

I liked it two

17 hours ago
Cru_Jones86

I liked it bifurcated.

15 hours ago
PM_ME_FIREFLY_QUOTES

I've got have a mind to correct OP...

17 hours ago
astro3lvis

I halve have a mind personally

16 hours ago
namsur1234

Whatever the recommendation OP goes with, let's hope they don't half ass it.

17 hours ago
Timbaland77

Halve would have been better 😜

15 hours ago
Dervick08

I don’t half any recommendations. He might half to ask an expert. I half seen people do something similar

11 hours ago
superjew7

I don’t get it am I slow😭

16 hours ago
rocketmonkee

The correct word should be, "Does anyone have any recommendations?" But OP wrote, "Does anyone half any recommendations?" In this case, OP is asking for recommendations to cut a cup in half. Whether or not it was an intentional typo, it's a great pun.

16 hours ago
superjew7

Wow maybe I am slow😭

16 hours ago
OJSimpsons

We all think you're very special.

15 hours ago
wendyxqm

I half nothing to add

14 hours ago
Chronodox

Should work fine, go extremely slow and run lots of water over it

19 hours ago
adamhughey

I’ve also placed a piece of painters tape over tile when cutting to be extra careful in avoiding chipping. Might work here.

18 hours ago
dammitOtto

Also, cut into all the corners first and then go all the way to avoid chipout at the weak spots.  That's a good idea for tile but who knows how a cup will react.

17 hours ago
Late_Woodpecker7300

Yup. Get a saw with a laser so you can line the cuts up when you spin it.

12 hours ago
Hairy_is_the_Hirsute

Came here to suggest this

18 hours ago
udyrtime

I remember something about cutting porcelain fully submerged under water keeps it from cracking or breaking at all.

16 hours ago
Undrwtrbsktwvr

Let me get my diving-saw…

16 hours ago
udyrtime

Easier than that, I believe you etch first then crack underwater to minimize shattering.

15 hours ago
BillShooterOfBul

Ive done this before. I mean perfectly. So here’s the way I did it: take an existing mug that you’ve used and abused with an aeropress for two years. Make sure you can see the physical toll on the mug evidenced by small cracks. Ok now what you’re going to want to do, is to use that same aeropress but grind super fine, like espresso sized. then be sure to use the fellow pressimo Cap with an additional paper filter. You’re going to want maximum pressure here. Now make the coffee as normal, but when pressing try to do it as hard and as fast as possible. The cup should split in two perfect halves and the hot coffee just goes wherever on your pants, the counter, the floor what ever.

17 hours ago
Avatar_spiderman

Fucking dead 😂

11 hours ago
jango-lionheart

The story sneaks up on you

9 hours ago
bargaindownhill

you might want to consider using a lapidary blade. They are much thinner kerf and wont put as much force on the porcelain. I would imagine a thin kerf blade would make a perfect cut here.

18 hours ago
SubsequentDamage

Dremel’s EZ SpeedClic Diamond Cutting Wheel (SC545) is excellent for cutting ceramic, porcelain, marble, and tile. Wear your PPE!

17 hours ago
InadmissibleHug

My mosaic-ing friends use a dremel

12 hours ago
Autumn_Moon_Cake

I know it's not a tile saw, but a waterjet can handle this type of cut. I've done it-so i know it works.

19 hours ago
UnstoppableDrew

Sure, but you can't buy one at Harbor Freight for under $100.

15 hours ago
mambotomato

Yeah, waterjets are what's typically used for any "cool cutaway prop" type things.

18 hours ago
GeniusEE

Without that annoying chip at the end that you get with a saw...

19 hours ago
GeniusEE

Why?

How many?

19 hours ago
adamhughey

They just want a half caffeinated cup for after dinner.

18 hours ago
zztop5533

Such an optimist. I tend toward a half un-caffeinated cup.

16 hours ago
azlan194

Duh, they wanna half their caffein intake.

17 hours ago
MrP1232007

Yes OP, why?! I'm invested.

19 hours ago
ThimeeX

I'm guessing some sort of art project? Or perhaps interior decoration, like the wall of a new coffee shop.

17 hours ago
NewEase7435

Maybe it’s an elaborate prank. Glue the half without a handle to the shelf inside of the cupboard, lightly glue the handle half to the first half, but not to the cupboard. Wait for unsuspecting victim to rip the cup in half as they go to get it out.

28 minutes ago
BeetsMe666

For someone who just wants half a cup of tea?

19 hours ago
JackpineSauvage

Never tried it, but I would fill it with sand, tape it off, turn it upsidedown, and give it a try?

18 hours ago
bubblesculptor

Sand would be terrible when cutting thru it, spilling over saw mechanisms etc...

But the idea of adding support the inside is smart.  

I've seen similar approaches using clay or wax temporarily pressed inside something delicate being cut.   That would also allow keeping a gap along the cut line to avoid interference.

4 hours ago
NootHawg

Soak some kite string in rubbing alcohol. Tie the kite string around the cup where you want the cut. Light kite string on fire. After a few seconds submerge the entire thing into a sink filled with cold water. You will have a perfect cut in less than a minute.

18 hours ago
surnik22

I don’t think this will work on tea cups. They are generally designed to be able to handle temperature changes.

It works on glass bottles because the glass isn’t and will crack. You can crack a glass bottle just by pouring boiling water in, if a mug cracked from that it wouldn’t be a useful mug.

18 hours ago
mambotomato

Yeah it's pretty dubious for ceramics, but also OP should expect to sacrifice a dozen mugs to trial and error so maybe it's worth a shot for the hell of it.

18 hours ago
Egad86

And video the whole thing to post for us!

18 hours ago
werewilf

OP PLEASE DO THIS I wanna know if it works!

18 hours ago
NootHawg

Go try it for yourself. I have cut countless liquor bottles and super thick champagne bottles to make cheap drinking glasses using this method. Of course you need to sand down the sharp edges and clean before drinking from them.

18 hours ago
azlan194

Glass and ceramic are different. OP wanna cut coffee mugs, which are ceramic. Unlike glass, ceramic can withstand that temperature change.

17 hours ago
Awwwmann

It works

18 hours ago
SandmanLM

Works on glass. Does it also work on ceramic?

18 hours ago
markmcminn

Yoooo this right here^

18 hours ago
AbsoluteMaestro

Submerge it completely in water, and cut slowly

19 hours ago
ACMEexp

Can you please elaborate on how this would be achieved? All I can picture is OP in the bathtub with his wet saw.

17 hours ago
AbsoluteMaestro

Well it mainly reduces the vibrations and focuses the force at the spot of the cut.

OP in the bathtub with a saw is the solution to a completely different problem. /S

17 hours ago
ypsilondigi

r/funwithelectricity

16 hours ago
got-to-find-out

BINGO!

18 hours ago
d4nowar

+1

This is the way

18 hours ago
Medullan

This is the correct answer OP.

18 hours ago
kewli

Probably better to cast and fire a clay half cup than cut an existing one

17 hours ago
beedelia

Yep. Find a local pottery studio and ask around.

11 hours ago
jango-lionheart

Much easier to cut clay before it’s fired, lol

9 hours ago
gvictor808

Maybe use a hacksaw and do the whole process with cup underwater. For some reason ceramics don't shatter underwater.

18 hours ago
SocialSuicideSquad

If you know any machine show owners or materials engineers, ask if you can use a wet abrasive saw.

It's basically a paper-thick disc that spins ridiculously fast and has water/abrasive mix continuously sprayed on it.

Kerf goes down to .3mm and no heating/warping issues.

18 hours ago
sealeg86

Putting painters tape over your cut line will help with chipping

17 hours ago
mxadema

Water jet

17 hours ago
Putrid_Response_4

Waterjet would do this. Find a shop nearby.

11 hours ago
KidKilobyte

Switch to decaf instead

19 hours ago
TheAndyPat

*dechalf

18 hours ago
ACMEexp

*Half caf

13 hours ago
Doormancer

Half you tried something smaller, like maybe a dremel or die grinder with a thin abrasive wheel?

17 hours ago
sidetablecharger

Mr. Wonka?

17 hours ago
iamjackscoldsweater

Maybe try a tile handsaw and do it under water in a big bucket? Works with drilling porcelain

16 hours ago
dodgyrogy

I suggest filling it with something first(Plaster of Paris?). Cutting a "solid" item may help reduce vibration and cracking problems.

16 hours ago
phishin3321

I have no suggestions but wanted you to know I upvoted due to the title lol.

16 hours ago
quasifrodo89

They were so concerned about if they could do it, that they never stopped to consider whether they should

14 hours ago
WG50

Everyone is saying do this underwater, so this looks like a perfect opportunity to use sharks with laser beams attached to their heads.

The laser beams will give you a nice clean cut.

13 hours ago
raar__

depending on the height of your cup, it's going to be hard to buy something that is relatively inepensive due to the depth of blade you will need for this. You could try an angle grinder, not sure if you would end up shattering it though.

12 hours ago
TocasLaFlauta

I would do a cut from each side - if it does crack it will be at the end and this way the two aligned cuts can help control where the crack will go.

12 hours ago
AdvancedSquashDirect

buy several "test" cups to practice - don't try to cut the one you want on the first try.

12 hours ago
Beanmachine314

No biggie just make sure you're using a continuous rim blade. I've cut stuff far more delicate than this.

11 hours ago
radlinsky

You could alternatively throw a mug if you have any friends with a pottery wheel.. and then cut it in half before firing. Would be much easier!

42 minutes ago
omegafivethreefive

Make a coffee cup/tea cup out of porcelain and cut it while it's leather hard.

18 hours ago
RandyRhoadsLives

“Leather Hard” was my gay porn name. I was kicked out of the industry for not paying my union dues. Meh, it’s a story as old as time, I know.

18 hours ago
pattybutty

Did they give you a good hiding for those debts?

2 hours ago
gvictor808

Underwater thing https://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/794756/why-can-you-hammer-a-hole-into-an-underwater-ceramic-cup

18 hours ago
NortWind

Cast the cup in a solid block of plaster. Cut it, then dissolve the plaster with acid.

18 hours ago
HappyGoPink

You could just fill the cup halfway, instead of physically cutting it in half. The half-cup won't really hold liquid properly anyway.

16 hours ago
thanksferstoppen

Lots of water.

18 hours ago
badgko

If you have access to one, a waterjet may do better.

18 hours ago
mosaic_hops

Start with a whole.

18 hours ago
ukyman95

You can rent them or buy them . Are you looking for advise on which one or how to ?

18 hours ago
rlnrlnrln

Don't use a Sawzall.

17 hours ago
BirdLooter

This "half" is kinda genius, but also probably an accident lol. made my brain go brrr

17 hours ago
IrishDaveInCanada

Tape inside and outside the cut line with a strong tape. Painters tape won't cut it here, duct tape, or vinyl tape is what you want.

Use a continuous edge diamond cutting disk, not segmented, and have plenty of, water running over it.

Cut one side to the edge of the base, then turn it around and finish the cut from the other side. (You will be less likely to rip the side off, and the base of a cup is usually the thickest, so it makes sense to finish the cut there)

I've never cut a cup, but it may help to fit a piece of ridged insulation to inside the cup to help brace it and dampen vibrations.

Move slowly, particularly at the start and finish.

17 hours ago
R2rowYourBoat

Wet tiles saws usually have thick blades. If I wanted to do this I would try a dremel with a hand piece with a thin diamond disc.

17 hours ago
whabt

Do you need both halves? You could probably sand one down on a belt sander. They also make diamond blades for bandsaws.

16 hours ago
mbecker82

Just do it and see what happens

16 hours ago
heirofadam

willy wonka, that you?

16 hours ago
Ok_Ambition9134

Cut it just proud of the halfway point. Grind it down to the middle to get rid of the chips.

16 hours ago
sowokeicantsee

Depends if you want a perfect cut. Is it for an art show ?

I’m fully aware there is half a cup but the cut is chipped.

If you want a no chip cut then off to your local water jet cutter or you have to buy the tools to cut and polish cermaic tile edges

16 hours ago
BeRandom1456

Cutting it underwater will stop chipping.

16 hours ago
Alarming-Caramel

take a wet saw and use that to cut it in half. 👍

16 hours ago
RobotDeathSquad

Step 1: Rent a tile saw from home depot.

Step 2: cut thing in half.

Not sure what else you're looking for?!?

15 hours ago
Ludwig_Vista2

Find a metal fab co. with a water jet

15 hours ago
Charlie9261

I only half a half of a recommendation.

15 hours ago
BluntTruthGentleman

Find a sheet metal shop with a high pressure water cutter, convince them to run your teacup through.

Also this is definitely r/diwhy material

15 hours ago
gijshaha

Just drop it and hope for the best?

15 hours ago
FrightenedPrisoner2

Do it underwater.

15 hours ago
IHatrMakingUsernames

Slow feed rate. A tile saw is not a table saw. And watch where you stick those fingies... A tile saw will still cut you.

15 hours ago
Tambo5

Safety glasses.

14 hours ago
onward-and-upward

Start at the opening so that the edges that are most probable to chip have full support behind them. Cut it so that the blade is moving into the piece rather than pulling out toward the lip of the cup. For example I’d start with the cup basically facing your face, meaning lip facing toward you at a 45 degree angle from the table and starting in on the side of the cup right up near the edge. The goal is to have the stresses you’re applying point toward the uncut bulk of the cup so that you’re not putting force on any edges hanging out. Slow and steady. Be ready to try a couple times. Try it on a goodwill mug first if you have one important one you don’t want to mess up.

14 hours ago
Cold_Stress7872

A waterjet would probably do a nice job on this.

14 hours ago
HajjiBalls

Do 't use a segmented blade.

13 hours ago
KHfailure

Knowing why would probably help.

Most methods have been offered by others for cutting an actual cup.

I'm assuming there's a specific cup you want to cut in half. Do you actually need to cut that cup or would a copy be acceptable?

Basically, mold, cast, cut is my suggestion.

Unless there's a need for an actual cup to be cut.

13 hours ago
ImpulsE69

use painters tape where you are going to cut. I don't know the science behind it, but it helps prevent it from chipping/breaking.

13 hours ago
wizzard419

I'm not sure if it works the same for sawing, but if you could keep the entire mug underwater (doing the wet saw works too but may still have risk) that apparently keeps it cool, lubricated, and more space for particles to flow into. It's how you would do it if you wanted to drill a hole in the bottom of a glass or mug.

13 hours ago
874ifsd

A waterjet would give better results.

13 hours ago
redditisahive2023

Why not have it waterjetted?

13 hours ago
saywha1againmthrfckr

I don't half a clue

13 hours ago
Admirable_Hand9758

If you're cutting back on coffee and only want 1/2 a cup just don't fill it all the way. ;

13 hours ago
the_gorgeous_one

Get a few cups. You’re gonna break some figuring it out.

13 hours ago
RepresentativeIcy193

I'd fill it with spray foam (or something to help keep it from breaking) and wrap it in tape. Maybe just tape on both sides would be enough.

12 hours ago
MisterB78

Does anyone half any recommendations?

12 hours ago
absentfacejack

Is this one of those things where if you do it under water the glass comes out with a clean cut, and if you don’t it is ragged or shatters?

11 hours ago
DataSnorts

you can do that cut with a tile saw probably have to run through twice, but if you want to do this on porcelain with no chipping, I think you'd need something like this: https://www.amazon.com/Superfine-Suitable-Ceramics-Materials-Thickness/dp/B0F53WH7TJ/

10 hours ago
ac54

Have several cups handy to experiment on.

10 hours ago
BingoMosquito

Make sure your blade has no wobble

10 hours ago
Jealous-Ad-214

Take it to a metal shop that cuts with a water jet

10 hours ago
ZarathustraSez

You heard him, Bustard!

9 hours ago
Mental_Space_8976

Could counsider filling it with plaster to reinforce it then cut and remove, wax the interiof to help it release

9 hours ago
ArbutusPhD

Don’t cut that one … it’s already cut

9 hours ago
cone10

Why not pay a random potter at a local pottery studio to make a half cup for you? There are people who make tens of cups at one sitting ... they can halve one before it goes into the kiln.

9 hours ago
Xajel

Porcelain is so fragile as it can easily shattered.

  1. Slow & wet cutting is crucial.
  2. A sharp blade (new) is crucial, a diamond saw blade could be the perfect start. While tungsten carbide can also make the cut, most TC saw blade are designed for metals and rough cutting, so a diamond blade might be the one and only options for a clean cut.
  3. Holding the cup steady is crucial.
  4. You might want to have multiple cups to experiment with, as you find the optimal holding position & saw speed.
7 hours ago
DevilsInkpot

You can also try to submerge it in water while cutting. It helps greatly while drilling porcelaine.

6 hours ago
TrippingEstrogen

Wear work gloves and a dust mask. The dust off the wet saw will be wet, but as you work it'll start to dry. Do not breathe porcelain. Cut a test piece to get a feel for it first. Keep in mind you'll lose material the width of your blade so if you're trying to save a design account for that accordingly. I chopped up several dishes to make porcelain armor. Once you get the hang of it it's not bad.

3 hours ago
InterestingSky2832

Try scoring the edge with a glass cuter that would give you an edge for your blade to grip on. I would then fill a Tupperware with water and the cup as well and go at it with a diamond wheel on a Dremel

1 hour ago
earthcolap

Two pieces of tape parallel to each other, cut in between them

1 hour ago
earthcolap

I would use a wet band saw with a diamond blade (typically used for stained glass, lapidary, and coral )

1 hour ago
kindanormle

My trick for tile is to wrap the tile in masking tape where I want to cut. I am not sure why it helps prevent chipping but it does. It works on wood too. As others have said though, brand new blade, go slow and make sure it’s secured down so it doesn’t move

48 minutes ago
knifer77

Freeze in ice block

16 minutes ago
dodadoler

Just buy a smaller cup

18 hours ago
internetlad

I'm hoping OP wants to do this to a cup and add a trough in between so the up is a foot wide.

17 hours ago
internetlad

Isn't there a method to do this with thermal cracking? You shape a wire and run a current through it so it's red hot, then plunge the itemand it cracks exactly along the line it was heated?

I know this is a pretty floaty thought but I'm thinking of some shit I saw on YouTube like. . . Years ago. 

17 hours ago
DrBearcut

They make smaller cups you don’t have to go through all this trouble.

17 hours ago
bodhiseppuku

I've seen videos hammering a nail into a ceramic cup in the air tends to break it; however, nailing into a cup under water makes the hole without breaking the cup. Considering this data point...

If it were me trying to cut a cup under water, I'd try the following:

- Tape a towel into the center of the cup, stuffing enough material in the cup and taping it shut that you have some internal structural pressure while cutting.

- Submerge your cup with towel taped inside into your half-filled kitchen sink.

- Using a Dremel with a Flex Shaft attachment and a ceramic cutting tip, score the line on the outside, where you want to half the cup. Score a line on the inside too. Then continue to deepen the score lines until the cup separates. The Flex shaft is not electric, so the Dremel can be out of the water while the flex shaft will be fine submerged in the water.

- You could even try (after you score the cup) heating the cup up in the microwave, boiling water in it. Then remove the now hot cup, toss out the boiling water, and submerge it in ice water... might split easily at your score lines ... or maybe not and you'll have to score deeper.

15 hours ago
bioberserkr2

Get 2 identical cups and cut both into 2 60% and 40% pieces, making sure that the 60% portion of the second one is the same side of the cup as the 40% portion of the first cup. Then use a belt sander with a really smooth grit, sanding each down to perfect halves

13 hours ago
Toginator

Definitely have a method to retain the cut other than your hand while doing this cut.

18 hours ago
yolef

We tile saws generally use a diamond abrasive blade, they won't really cut flesh unless you really lean into it.

18 hours ago
dr_stre

Dear diary, today I met a tile saw!

18 hours ago
Aggravating-Pound598

Cup

18 hours ago