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The kit includes both kinds of blades and hex wrenches along with the hole cutter and the shield. I have made discs out of wood and plastic and even thick rubber sheet materials for projects that I would not otherwise even attempted to do by hand. When I bought my own it was the revamped X-200, the X-230 that uses the same size shield but cuts an inch large hole, all the way up to 9". The hole cutter works well on a drill press as well as a hand drill and with the work piece in a jig or clamped down I don't need the pilot bit.
Being able to exactly adjust the blades for the hole size I need is what first attracted me to the Hole Pro. Perfect balance and indestructible. The tungsten carbide blades work well in drywall, plaster, and Hardie cement board and the high speed steel are perfect for wood and plastics and acoustic ceiling tiles. It takes very little power to make holes with the hole cutter. Having the shield holding all the dust and the cut piece of sheetrock is another obvious benefit of the tool. Being able to change them out in under a minute for a different type or new ones is both a time saver and a big dollar saver. When I saw someone using the Hole Pro X-200 on a project I was amazed to see how fast the 6-7/8" holes were being cut in a tongue and groove wood ceiling and even more surprised that the drill being used was a 18 volt cordless drill. I cut 6" holes in Hardie siding last week using a 14 volt drill and it worked great.
The shield is very light and surprisingly strong. The ball bearing mount is very smooth so the shield does not spin while the blades are cutting. The soft rubber gasket stays soft and has a double section so it makes a tight dust seal. The Hole Pro design with its twin blades is a completely different animal. Doing it upside down to make holes in a ceiling for recessed can lights, HVAC ducts, exhaust fans, or in-ceiling speakers was even more daunting and very messy.
Luckily there is the 2-12" version from Hole Pro, the X-305 hole cutter. I have made my share of holes over the years and the larger the hole the more of a pain it was to make often requiring tracing a circle and then cutting out the hole with a sabre saw or a compass saw. What I soon saw was that unlike with a jab saw the shield made it easy to get a perfectly straight in cut so everything sits flush with the ceiling and I could use the orange tensioning knob to limit how deep I cut so I worry a lot less about accidentally cutting a hidden wire or piece of pipe. Top performance and top quality with the ABS shield, the chrome plated bar, well machined parts, and tough carry case.
Even my big 1/2" stud drill is maxed out at less than 5 inches with a hole saw so it was fun to be able to cut holes twice as big with a 18v cordless drill and the Hole Pro cutter. As the tool is used on the drill's low speed setting at around 200 RPM's the 2 blades make for cutting that takes half the time. As we started doing more 8" in-ceiling speaker installations the cutout holes kept getting larger with some more than 11 inches in diameter. You can stand on it without damaging it.
All you need is a drill and you are ready to cut holes from 2" up to 12".Great tool and my only wish is that I had one years ago. It comes off the hole cutter quickly for storage in the nice carry case that comes with the kit.I have used single blade hole cutters and dealt with the wobbling and eliptical cutting and broken balance bars and not being able to cut materials like wood or plastics well.
Being able to use the high speed steel blades on T&G and wood paneling and in less than a minute switch to the tungsten carbide blades and cut in sheetrock or plaster is a real pleasure. I have found through experimentation to cut just the plaster with the Hole Pro hole cutter using the tungsten carbide blades, and then to cut the lath or wire with either a carbide blade or snippers. There is an orange adjustment knob to control the spring compression but it also works very well to limit the cutting depth. I had a clean hole through the plaster which is what shows and no one sees the hole cut in the lath. I have used the X-305 on a drill press when making hundreds of holes and having the cut piece fall out easily makes it possible to use it with the shield in place for added safety.
The X-305 and the XL arbor kit sells for $195 and for the extra $25 you get the 2-12" hole cutter and two sets of cutting blades. If I want to cut wood the carbite grit hole saws are too slow to even consider using.At first I saw the shield as just a dust catcher, which is does extremely well with its soft rubber gasket. The single blade hole cutter would not cut smoothly and it was hard to get a truly round hole in sheetrock. No need to blow out the dust with a compressor. It actually cost me more than the X-305 that replaced it.Recently I bought the XL arbor kit that they make so you can use a hole saw with the shield. With the X-305 I can make a proper hole for any speaker on the market today or any new ones months or years from now. The last time I looked there were two dozen different can sizes being sold at Home Depot and most of them were at non-traditional sizes. The shield is very light and very strong.
Plaster is laid up in two layers with different materials and up and down vibration as with using a reciprocating saw blade can easily crack a plaster ceiling which then needs to be repaired, replastered, and repainted. At times I need to make large holes in Hardie and other fiber cement siding products for dryer vents, furnace condensate lines, and tankless water heaters, and the Hole Pro shield catches all the silica dust which is very harmful if inhaled. You put each blade holder by the 7 inch mark on each side and you get a 7 inch hole. With no cross brace like with cheaply built version the Hole Pro shield is easy to wipe clean after use. There are cheap adjustable hole cutters that can cut sheetrock but have no replaceable blades, miserable shields that don't catch the dust, and are truly a comnplete waste of money and not worth the bother.
The measure bar for the blade holders is marked in inches and in millimeters (and some can lights have the cut out dimensions in millimeters) and it is quick to set up. It also keeps the hole cutter at a 90 degree angle to the ceiling or wall so trim rings or speaker grills or pancake boxes all sit flush. In the past there were only 4 basic light can sizes (4-3/8, 6-3/8, 6-5/8, 6-7/8)and Milwaukee and others sold carbide grit hole saws for those sizes for about $80 each or over $300 for the set. The gasket along the edge is a soft rubber material and even after a couple years mine is still soft and pliable. The kit is very well designed and every part, including the carry case is very well built and meant to last for years of use. I adjust the blade holders in toward the center by 2 notches or marks and I get a perfect fire code approved plug to patch the holes after I am done pullin the new wires. It also covers every size can light being sold which is a bonus. Even with two blades the hole cutter is very efficient and works great with even 18v cordless drills on even plywood.
There are often times when I need to make a hole in tile and make use of a carbide grit hole saw. The tungsten carbide blades easily cut through the cement board and the shield does an excellent job of containing all the dust so it can be safely dumped. What used to be time consuming jobs requiring a drill press or a plunge router or compass saw are now quick and easy. The 3/8" shank on the hole cutter makes it easy to use even with a 14 volt cordless drill but I recommend using a 18 volt or at least a drill with a 2-speed gearbox so you can use the low speed and higher torque setting on the drill. If you want a quality tool that will cut very large holes in almost anything and will last for years this is the hole cutter to buy. With two blades the cutting is twice as fast and high RPMs are not needed.I had been using a single blade adjustable hole cutter from another company and it had 4 balance bars of different lengths to balance against the cutter. With all the mess from the hole saw I spent more time taping up plastic sheets before cutting and more time cleaning up afterwards than it took to cut the hole. The single blade hole cutter had a blade that was supposed to be for wood but it worked poorly and after a couple tries I stopped trying to use the tool on wood.
The 3 slots on the shield catch the shavings as the hole cutter blades swing around so it is easy to watch the cutting even when cutting into a sheetrocked ceiling. The twin blade design works very well. With the XL arbor kit I can now use any size hole saw up to 2-1/3" deep with the shield and have the shavings contained, a stright in hole, and even the ability to control the depth of the cut. Indoor speakers take a bigger cutout for the back box, and some 8" speakers need a 11" hole for mounting. On average I get more than 100 holes in wood, more than 200 10" holes in TJI, and at least 100 holes in sheetrock, 50 holes in Hardie siding, and usually about 30-40 holes in plaster.The 12 inch size is perfect for in-ceiling speakers.
I can set it to cut just the 5/8" sheetrock on the ceiling for speakers or can lights and not worry about slicing into a hidden wire or bit of plumbing (like a PEX waterline).The cross cutting action of the blades is the best way to cut holes in plaster and not get cracking. The blade holders clamp tightly so there is no movement even when cutting plywood and the blades can be changed out in under a minute. What is often not appreciated is that cordless drills have a hard time cutting holes larger than 2 inches in diameter with bi-metal hole saws but these same drills can easily cut a 12" diameter hole in sheetrock and even a 8" hole in plywood using one of these adjustable hole cutters. Saves a lot of time and leaves a very neat and tidy repair that is easily prepped for painting. Starrett makes a "cowl kit" that sells for $170 and has only the arbor and the shield. The two blades perfectly offset and balance each other so the cutting is very smooth.
Even if I wanted to deal with the mess these carbide grit hole cutters make they are not in the sizes I need and the cost is 10 times as much and I can't cut as deep as with the Hole Pro carbide blades. When pulling wire where I need to make a hole in the ceiling and in the wall I have learned to get a 2x2 foot square of sheetrock from Home Depot and take it to the job. When cutting into a ceiling where someone has smoked a lot I can wipe the gasket with a sponge and a little detergent and get it good as new for the next ceiling. I can stand on it and have no deflection.
I have cut holes with this hole cutter in tongue and groove ceilings, MDF, and acoustic tiles using the high speed steel blades in the kit, and with the tungsten carbide blades I have cut large holes in sheetrock, plaster, fiberglass, Hardie cement board, Durock, and even Wonderboard. I cut a 10" diameter hole in plywood the other day using that same Milwaukee cordless drill and have cut 18 holes that were 8-1/4" diameter in a tongue and grove wood ceiling for recessed light cans and it took less than an hour and the drill battery was still going strong.There are other hole cutters you can buy but none that work as well and let you cut the exact hole size needed and will perform anywhere near as well in such a wide range of materials. My hand drill would not be able to cut a 8" hole in a T&G ceiling even if a hole saw that size were made. The twin blades balance perfectly, make adjustments very easy, and cut twice as fast with no wobble and perfectly round holes even cutting in soft materials like sheetrock. I have used two other single blade hole cutters from other companies including a 300mm 12" (actually 11-5/8") model that wobbled, was hard to figure out which balance bar to use and which side to attach it on and it cut slowly, and cost $169.
My Milwaukee 18v is rated for 1-7/8" maximum hole size when cutting wood with a hole saw and even my 1/2" cord DeWalt heavy duty 600 RPM high torque drill is rated to cut only for up to a 3-1/2" hole saw when cutting wood. The Hole Pro adjustable hole cutter kits are head and shoulders above anything else available and at $139 are a real bargain. The kit includes a quality hard shell carry case, a shield that is lighter and stronger than any other I have used and has slots to catch the shavings when cutting overhead so you can still see what you are doing, adjustment wrenches for changing the cutting diameter or changing the blades (which can be done in seconds), a set of the high speed steel blades and a set of the tungsten carbide blades, and the adjustable hole cutter which is made up of fully machined parts and the measure bar is chrome plated which I really like. I bought one and used and then bought another one as a gift for my brother who is a remodeler to use on his jobs. I figured that is I bought just the 4 hole cutter sizes I would need for tungsten recessed light cans I would spend over $200, and now with all the halogen and par light cans I would need more than 20 sizes of hole saws.
I am a professional remodeling contractor and I install tubular skylights and own the 16" model. This tool is built extremely well and does a great job of cutting clean holes in drywall and plaster (haven't tried wood yet). After some trial and error, I have found that a) you need to use the clutch on your drill to keep the binding action (that is inevitable) from hurting you. b) the blade positions do work well to set the hole size and keep everything centered - you just have to look closely at the markings, then check the total diameter with a tape measure.
With this hole cutter I have cut hole up to 12 inches in diameter in wood with my old ½ drill and feel safe doing it.I like the dust shield that catches all the shavings. With the slots in the shield it is very strong and it makes it easy to watch as it is cutting. I did not need to make a template, just decide where the can was going and center the hole cutter and cut. There have been two problems with cutting holes, getting the right size hole saw, and not getting hurt when the hole saw gets stuck and the drill starts to spin around the other direction with me still holding on. I bought the 8" model and it worked so well that I gave it to my partner and bought myself the 12" hole cutter.
The cut plug is held by the dust shield and all I needed to do was flip it over and drop the plug into a 5 gallon bucket I tied to the ladder. It is amazing how well it cuts and I can cut the exact size hole from under 2 inches to 12 inches in size. It makes cleanup a breeze even when cutting holes in the ceiling. There is no cross brace needed for this composite plastic dust shield so it is much faster to wipe clean when done.The blades are very fast to change and the HSS blades cut very cleanly and the tungsten carbide blades last a long time. I put in recessed ceiling lights all through my house and this cutter made the job quick and easy.
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