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BIHUI Mini Diamond Blade

by BIHUI
SKU DCW50A

Original price $17.95 - Original price $17.95
Original price
$17.95
$17.95 - $17.95
Current price $17.95
Size: 2"

Precision cutting where a full-size wheel won't fit. The BIHUI DCW50A Mini Diamond Blade trims corners, shapes around obstacles, refines miters, and cleans up edges on delicate tile — its thin profile makes clean, chip-controlled detail cuts without excessive vibration or wandering. Smooth on porcelain and ceramic, aggressive enough for natural stone.

More Details

A compact mini diamond blade (DCW50A) for fine-detail tile cutting in tight spaces.

  • Model: DCW50A
  • Use: Detail cutting — trimming corners, shaping around obstacles, notches, miters, and edge cleanup
  • Profile: Thin rim for clean edges and fine detail with minimal vibration
  • Materials: Porcelain, ceramic, and natural stone
  • Best for: Shower niches, tight curves, and finish-stage adjustments on high-value tile
Shipping & Return Policies

BIHUI Mini Diamond Blade (DCW50A) — Detail Cuts in Tight Spaces

Some cuts are too small and too tight for a full-size blade — trimming a corner, notching around an obstacle, cleaning up an edge inside a niche. The BIHUI Mini Diamond Blade (DCW50A) is built for that fine-detail work. A thin rim gives you clean edges and precise control with minimal vibration, so you can shape porcelain, ceramic, and natural stone exactly where a big blade can't reach.

It's ideal for shower niches, tight curves, notches, miters, and edge cleanup — the finishing cuts that make an install look custom. Run it on a BIHUI mini angle grinder for the control that detail work demands.

Why Tile Pros Choose It

  • Detail cutting: Trims corners, notches, miters, and edges
  • Clean edges: Thin rim cuts precisely with minimal vibration
  • Reaches tight spots: Gets where full-size blades can't
  • For tile and stone: Porcelain, ceramic, and natural stone
  • Niche-friendly: Built for shower niches and tight curves
  • Pairs with mini grinders: Control where it counts

Pro tip: Let the blade speed do the cutting and take light passes on detail work — forcing a thin rim around a curve is how you chip the edge. Keep it cool and ease into inside corners.