Archives: FAQs
Wall saw systems are designed for serious structural work, so they can handle thick walls and heavy concrete sections. If one pass isn’t enough,…
Anytime a wall needs a new opening without turning the whole structure into a demolition zone. Common uses include:
Cutting door and window…
Yes. In fact, that’s one of its biggest strengths. Modern concrete wall saws use diamond blades that cut through both concrete and steel rebar at…
The saw makes repeated, shallow passes up and down the track, plunging deeper into the wall each time until the cut is complete. It can easily cut…
Most of the time, it comes down to changes after the structure is already built. A warehouse might need a new loading dock. An office might be adding…
It’s a super-controlled way to cut through concrete walls using a track-mounted saw with a diamond blade.
Instead of swinging a handheld saw and…
From heavy industrial shutdowns to fast-turn commercial cuts, Ashton crews have been doing concrete slab sawing long enough to know what keeps…
Slab sawing is precise and controlled. Breaking is rough and demolition-focused. Most projects actually use both. Saw first, break after, depending…
Not when it’s done right. The whole point of slab sawing is controlled cutting, so only the intended section is affected, with clean separation…
Yes. It’s commonly used inside warehouses, plants, and commercial…