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Copper tubing cutter.

Firebrick43

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May 12, 2015
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West central Indiana
What's the best copper pipe cutter out there. I am sick of ones that don't hold up. Superior tool one not good. Like the imperial tubing cutter but it has not held up.
 
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claas880

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Sep 28, 2013
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55
Location
appleton wi
I like to use the ridgid 35s. it has fine threads on adjusting wheel and bearings in cutting wheel. I use it on a lot of stainless and copper tube
 

MattT

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Feb 20, 2010
Messages
3,201
I like my imperial and won't get away from them due to the groove where one can cut off small diameter jic flares. But, I have broke two of them far and I am not a tool abuser.

Are you working with copper or steel? I can't recall ever seeing JIC flared copper. If it is steel get a cutter rated for it not a hvac/plumbing model.

Personally I use Ridgid cutters. Model numbers 10 & 15 IIRC. Never broke one even on fairly thick wall stainless.
 

alexb2000

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Feb 7, 2010
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Location
Fort Worth, TX
I like to use the ridgid 35s. it has fine threads on adjusting wheel and bearings in cutting wheel. I use it on a lot of stainless and copper tube

I'll second this, I have only used my 35S on copper, but it works great. No comparison to a "normal" tubing cutter. You get what you pay for.
 
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Firebrick43

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May 12, 2015
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Location
West central Indiana
I'll second this, I have only used my 35S on copper, but it works great. No comparison to a "normal" tubing cutter. You get what you pay for.

I use the imperial on steel with jic. The pot metal frame has broke on it. I use it at work and they buy them so I will continue to use them there but not spending my money on them.

The tubing I am cutting at home is mostly hard copper with small amounts of soft copper and copper nickle brake line. Stainless tubing I always cut with a saw to prevent work hardening before flaring.

The tubing cutter I am using currently is a superior similar to a ridgid 35
 
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bonneyman

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Apr 22, 2010
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Desert SW
For tight turning radius the Imperial Mini-Imp is good, though the NLA Chicago Specialties is better (second from the bottom on the left - if you can find one) as it covers the wheel and doesn't catch your hand skin during use.
My old straight line Imperial 127F has nice leverage for such a small cutter. It's pictured how I found it before cleaning and a new wheel.

Most of my HVAC-use ones are Imperial.
 

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PureLeaf

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Jul 25, 2014
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1,417
I have several rothenbergers of various sizes, all made in Spain. Work well for me.
 

FullRaceMerc

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Jan 9, 2015
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3,869
Location
SoCal (SGV)
I'm still using the Ridgid 205 ratcheting tube cutter that I've had for 30 something years. Other than keeping it lubed & occasionally replacing the cutting wheel it has been worry free. It will cut 1/4 tube at the small end, but just barely. On the large end it gets used to cut 2" abs.

Cutting copper pipe is its main duty, but I've cut emt with it in a pinch. It ratchets so you don't have to crank it all the way from one end to the other. With a new wheel it will cut plastic tubular traps & such, but it's not the best tool for that job. The thin plastic tube compresses too much.

I use it whenever there is room. I have other cutters for tight spaces, but none of those work as well.

Online pic:
ridgid-205-ratcheting-enclosed-feed-tubing-cutter-33055.jpg
 

Ganymedes

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Apr 24, 2013
Messages
88
Location
Morvan, Burgundy,France
For tight turning radius the Imperial Mini-Imp is good, though the NLA Chicago Specialties is better (second from the bottom on the left - if you can find one) as it covers the wheel and doesn't catch your hand skin during use.
My old straight line Imperial 127F has nice leverage for such a small cutter. It's pictured how I found it before cleaning and a new wheel.

Most of my HVAC-use ones are Imperial.

Bonneyman,and the other guys,
I have tube cutters from Ridgid, Imperial-Eastman,Rothenberger,Virax,Facom, Rems and Dako (= David Kotthaus, Germany, now living further under Gedore´s umbrella), from 4, 75 mm till 50,8mm dia. and I like them all.
 

bonneyman

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Joined
Apr 22, 2010
Messages
8,857
Location
Desert SW
Bonneyman,and the other guys,
I have tube cutters from Ridgid, Imperial-Eastman,Rothenberger,Virax,Facom, Rems and Dako (= David Kotthaus, Germany, now living further under Gedore´s umbrella), from 4, 75 mm till 50,8mm dia. and I like them all.

Hey, post some pics! :drool:
 

monkeyspanners

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Joined
May 28, 2013
Messages
419
Location
Oxford, UK
Rothenberger (though quality going bad due to china). Hilmor, Rems. I have some older Imperial ones which are good but newer ones I've had cut spirals and had one where I kept cutting myself as the chrome flaked off.
 

larry_g

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Joined
Apr 28, 2007
Messages
16,893
Location
oregon
One thing I learned about tubing cutters is that some manufactures have specific cutting wheels for different materials. They are consumables. So if your breaking the tools are you forcing a dull cutter to work or have the wrong cutter wheel for the material at hand. Another thing is make sure that you have the correct frame size for the dia and wall thickness of the material being cut.

You don't expect one adjustable wrench to be a whole tool kit. Don't expect one tubing cutter to do everything. You might need a few.

lg
no neat sig line
 
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Firebrick43

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May 12, 2015
Messages
14,185
Location
West central Indiana
One thing I learned about tubing cutters is that some manufactures have specific cutting wheels for different materials. They are consumables. So if your breaking the tools are you forcing a dull cutter to work or have the wrong cutter wheel for the material at hand. Another thing is make sure that you have the correct frame size for the dia and wall thickness of the material being cut.

You don't expect one adjustable wrench to be a whole tool kit. Don't expect one tubing cutter to do everything. You might need a few.

lg
no neat sig line

The imperials broke from being dropped bench height not from dull wheels. I change my wheels regularly to avoid flare cracking from work hardening. While I don't drop tools regularly I do expect them to survive from 36".

The imperial frames look to be pot metal. And thin at that
 
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