I did almost the exact same thing with a identical cutn break saw some months ago. But I did a big mistake. After cutting the horizontal separating line 1/3 up from the floor (after the two vertical lines), the upper part(2/3) only "hang" in the upper concrete. Then I checked if the lower block could be tilted away, and it could. But when tilting the lower block, the rear edge touched the upper block, and the upper block fell down quickly. It went good and im glad I wasnt injuried. The brick blocks that were used when the house was built is really heavy, not hollow. Learning by doing
I love these Husqvarna saws. K770 Cut n Break in my view beats any concrete chain saw or even a ring saw (Ring saw is great but needs a LOT of maintenance). Many of my buddies have this saw - I think it is one of the TOP tools I ever owned. And the blades last a long time too. TOP TOP TOP.
Great saw and presentation. Now I know what I need. I have to cut out 24 window openings, this saw will save me a lot of time and money. Thanks guys for sharing this video, very helpful. I'm leaving my subscription here. Stay connected guys
If I had to do that many I would use something a lot easier to handle. Talk to a concrete cutting contractor that does enough to wave the huge bladed self supporting track saws. I have seen some huge blades like 36-48 inches. They can make cleaner cuts in 1 slice in just a few minutes.
I own both of those saws. The k760 cut n break and that makita dpc7311( plus hilti dsh600x, corecut electric concrete saw, stihl ts800 and husqvarna k970) My favorite for depth obviously is that cut & break, for typical cutting probly the hilti but that makita is a great saw too. Anyway, have a good one
Hey I’ve been doing this for some years now kinda afraid never used glasses but I’m worried I must as eye injuries are scary as heck but how can you with that slurry always being a problem kinda got me scared what’s your input
@@MakeEverything cool... Great cause I'm an electrical engineer, and I'm putting on the drawings to saw cut and trench for nine 4" conduits going underneath a basement wall of a hospital. We don't have a lot of room overhead, so it could be our only choice. But will it be overly difficult and not worth the space savings? It's CMU, but underneath it is a footer, 20" wide and 16" deep. It's just deeper concrete perhaps with some heavier rebar in it than the rest of the floor. The wall is verified non load bearing by structural engineer. I'm beginning to think a typical concrete worker wouldn't even flinch at this task...what do you think?
Rent one and try it out. I owned several of them. Awesome tools and probably the faster and way cheaper than any ring or concrete chain saw. I highly recommend this saw.
@@davidwhite9848 if you are hitting heavy rebar a diamond blade will work. Keeping water on the blade will keep it cool and extend the life when hitting concrete.
Guys, get a lapel mic. It's painful to listen to all the echo in the room. Younger ears might not mind, but it's tough in mine... Thanks for posting these videos...
@@rebel1333frank Your correct; I had always called the cut n break saw a ring saw but after I wrote that reply to you, I investigated as you said and found that Husqvarna also makes a ring saw that drives the blade on the inside, sorta like a planetary gear drive. Thanks, on my project I need to saw thru 12" concrete block and limit the mess on the inside.
Alexander, at 3:17 the operator has the saw inserted into the cut at least 12" and the saw could still go an additional 3" more. It only cuts about 2" deep per pass, then you must break out the ridge from between the 2 saw blades than go back and cut another 2" deep pass. To get to 15" deep you must make at least 8 passes. This saw not meant for frail people. But it keeps the mess all on one side of the job, hopefully on the outside for all you safety police.
David Schwartz You seem to be pretty knowledge about this saw.Could you use it to cut limestone block if you somehow hooked water up to it.I’ve got thick block I’m wanting to make 2” veneers out of.If not this what saw would be best for that application.Thanks for any info
I did almost the exact same thing with a identical cutn break saw some months ago. But I did a big mistake. After cutting the horizontal separating line 1/3 up from the floor (after the two vertical lines), the upper part(2/3) only "hang" in the upper concrete. Then I checked if the lower block could be tilted away, and it could. But when tilting the lower block, the rear edge touched the upper block, and the upper block fell down quickly. It went good and im glad I wasnt injuried. The brick blocks that were used when the house was built is really heavy, not hollow. Learning by doing
I love these Husqvarna saws. K770 Cut n Break in my view beats any concrete chain saw or even a ring saw (Ring saw is great but needs a LOT of maintenance). Many of my buddies have this saw - I think it is one of the TOP tools I ever owned. And the blades last a long time too. TOP TOP TOP.
That’s a bad ass tool. Thanks for the demonstration.
Great saw and presentation. Now I know what I need. I have to cut out 24 window openings, this saw will save me a lot of time and money. Thanks guys for sharing this video, very helpful. I'm leaving my subscription here. Stay connected guys
It works great. I don't think anyone I know EVER took this saw back. I think everyone LOVES IT!!! Probably the cheapest way to go too.
If I had to do that many I would use something a lot easier to handle. Talk to a concrete cutting contractor that does enough to wave the huge bladed self supporting track saws. I have seen some huge blades like 36-48 inches.
They can make cleaner cuts in 1 slice in just a few minutes.
I own both of those saws. The k760 cut n break and that makita dpc7311( plus hilti dsh600x, corecut electric concrete saw, stihl ts800 and husqvarna k970) My favorite for depth obviously is that cut & break, for typical cutting probly the hilti but that makita is a great saw too. Anyway, have a good one
I’ve use that tool before for cutting out basement windows. I’ve never used to ring concrete saw, it seems like they only have those in Europe.
Chris....you and yo fancy tools brotha haha keep the videos coming!
Thanks another for sharing..you guys are Awesome 👌 #onelove
How does it do on poured concrete walls?
Mike let's the rest of the crew do the hard stuff.
Is it possible to cut reinforced concrete (thus with steel bars inside) with that?
Yes it’ll cut rebar That gets in the way
Great video so it can cut the ground concrete as well ? Up to 18” ?
Hey I’ve been doing this for some years now kinda afraid never used glasses but I’m worried I must as eye injuries are scary as heck but how can you with that slurry always being a problem kinda got me scared what’s your input
Not strictly what I think of as "concrete wall", these are cinder blocks. Will it cut reinforced concrete?
Yes, and there are many variety of blade for specific purposes. These diamond blades do well through rebar as well
WTF.. I was a bricklayer for 23yrs wish i would have had one of these.
corrosive72 it’s really an amazing tool!!
Cool saw!
Nice video, Chris!
Where is the best place to buy that machine?
Whats the cutting width?
👍👍👍👍that's a new one for me
How does it handle rebar?
Diamond blade will cut through it well!!
@@MakeEverything cool... Great cause I'm an electrical engineer, and I'm putting on the drawings to saw cut and trench for nine 4" conduits going underneath a basement wall of a hospital. We don't have a lot of room overhead, so it could be our only choice. But will it be overly difficult and not worth the space savings? It's CMU, but underneath it is a footer, 20" wide and 16" deep. It's just deeper concrete perhaps with some heavier rebar in it than the rest of the floor. The wall is verified non load bearing by structural engineer. I'm beginning to think a typical concrete worker wouldn't even flinch at this task...what do you think?
Hm, I'm wondering if this will work on my basement cistern demolition project.
Rent one and try it out. I owned several of them. Awesome tools and probably the faster and way cheaper than any ring or concrete chain saw. I highly recommend this saw.
Will it cut through rebar?
Yeah, its not the greatest thing for the diamond blade, but its made to do that.
What is the best blade for rebar?
@@davidwhite9848 if you are hitting heavy rebar a diamond blade will work. Keeping water on the blade will keep it cool and extend the life when hitting concrete.
It a, great cutter
Please Sr can you help me. My husqvarna cut n break at high fire it ceases to work when it makes a poping sound.. Please what can I do?
Brushes?
Guys, get a lapel mic. It's painful to listen to all the echo in the room. Younger ears might not mind, but it's tough in mine... Thanks for posting these videos...
Ah I know!! I just got one but forgot it at the shop this day! I promise the future videos will have better audio! thanks!
Dude that is fucken awesome
New one
not many places rent that saw
I've been looking for one to rent in the Dallas, TX area....and NOTHING.
e excelente video buen trabajo Felicidades🍺🍔🍺🍔🍺🍔🍺🍔🍺🍔🍺🍔🍺🍺🍺🍺🍺🍺🍺🍺
Yeah gas inside a building... this is where you need the electric version of this tool
Today I used this saw cutting through solid concrete 12 inches thick wasn't fun. I prefer a ring saw
@ look up a ring saw or the concrete chainsaw I prefer those... I have experience cutting all kinds of concrete, I've used ever tool out there
I believe this is a ring saw?
This is a cut and break saw a ring saw cuts 10.5" 11" deep
@@rebel1333frank Your correct; I had always called the cut n break saw a ring saw but after I wrote that reply to you, I investigated as you said and found that Husqvarna also makes a ring saw that drives the blade on the inside, sorta like a planetary gear drive. Thanks, on my project I need to saw thru 12" concrete block and limit the mess on the inside.
where is the 16 inches, listen 6 at the most, gthoh
Alexander, at 3:17 the operator has the saw inserted into the cut at least 12" and the saw could still go an additional 3" more. It only cuts about 2" deep per pass, then you must break out the ridge from between the 2 saw blades than go back and cut another 2" deep pass. To get to 15" deep you must make at least 8 passes. This saw not meant for frail people. But it keeps the mess all on one side of the job, hopefully on the outside for all you safety police.
David Schwartz You seem to be pretty knowledge about this saw.Could you use it to cut limestone block if you somehow hooked water up to it.I’ve got thick block I’m wanting to make 2” veneers out of.If not this what saw would be best for that application.Thanks for any info
Inside a building with a gas saw not the smartest way to go about this job
Where is the best place to buy that machine?