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Rubi RUBISCRAPER Replacement Grout Removal Blades

by Rubi
SKU 66810
Original price $33.39 - Original price $36.75
Original price
$33.39
$33.39 - $36.75
Current price $33.39
Size: 1/16" (1.5mm)

Sharp blades, clean joints. Rubi RUBISCRAPER Replacement Blades bring your scraper back to peak performance for controlled, accurate removal of cement-based grout — without chewing up surrounding tile. Multiple thickness options let you match the blade to the joint width.

More Details

Replacement grout-removal blades for the Rubi RUBISCRAPER electric scraper.

  • For: The Rubi RUBISCRAPER grout-removal tool (exclusively)
  • Grout: Designed for cement-based grout
  • Thickness options: Multiple widths — match the blade to the grout joint to reduce tile chipping
  • Function: Restores controlled, accurate, stable grout removal
  • Durability: Built to withstand repetitive grout-removal tasks
Shipping & Return Policies

Rubi RUBISCRAPER Replacement Blades — Match the Blade to the Joint

A grout-removal tool is only as clean as its blade. These are the genuine replacement blades for the Rubi RUBISCRAPER electric scraper — the right consumable to keep it cutting accurately instead of dragging through cured grout. They're built with durable teeth to withstand repetitive grout-removal work, and they're made for cement-based grout.

They come in multiple widths, and that's the key: match the blade to your grout joint and you minimize tile chipping while restoring controlled, accurate, stable removal. A worn or wrong-width blade is the fastest way to scar tile edges — a fresh, correctly-sized one keeps the work clean.

Why Tile Pros Choose It

  • Right fit: Multiple widths to match the grout joint and protect tile edges
  • Built to last: Durable teeth for repetitive grout-removal tasks
  • For cement grout: Designed for cement-based grout removal
  • Restores accuracy: A fresh blade brings back controlled, stable removal
  • RUBISCRAPER-specific: Made for the Rubi RUBISCRAPER tool

Pro tip: Keep a couple of widths on hand so you can match the blade to whatever joint you're working — forcing a wide blade through a narrow joint is what chips tile. Swap the blade as soon as it stops cutting cleanly rather than pushing harder.