9911 Seminole Blvd. Seminole, FL 33772 www.TBNweekly.com

Review of Goldblatt BladeRunner Land O Lakes FL

The tool in Land O Lakes has strongly magnetized top and bottom halves, each with a rolling cutting wheel much like a mini pizza cutter. They are stored held apart by two hinged, spring-loaded legs which fold in when you start a cut at the edge of a sheet.

Nanc Construction Services
954-845-2350
1544 East Harmony Lakes Circle
Fort Lauderdale, FL
Exo Construction
305-218-8425
17649 N.W. 7 ct
Miami Gardens, FL
Paver Plus & Stone, Inc
954-931-5540
10394 NW 49th Court
Pompano Beach, FL
Cerutti & Associates
(305) 805-4747
12039 Sw 117th Ct
Miami, FL
Best Walls & Ceilings
(407) 244-8535
1622 Camerbur Dr
Orlando, FL
SMH Construction LLC
954-394-4020
3246 NE 27th Ave
Lighthouse Point, FL
carlos & d services
(305) 851-1513
8277 nw 191 ln
Hialeah, FL
AMG Drywall Inc.
(321) 663-4962
6445 S Chickasaw Trl
Orlando, FL
Bell Contracting
(407) 568-0853
18600 Commonwealth Ave
Orlando, FL
Compton Drywall
904 797-4250
601 St. Augustine South Drive
St. Augustine, FL
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Review of Goldblatt BladeRunner

Source: TOOLS OF THE TRADE Magazine
Publication date: February 23, 2009

By Myron Ferguson

Goldblatt's BladeRunner drywall cutter wasn't even on the market when I first heard about it, but it sounded so cool, I knew I wanted to try it out: a tool that scores both sides of a panel at the same time, and makes drywall cuts a very quick snap. I even dreamed about it one night, and woke up hoping I had just invented something in my sleep.

Now that I've tried it, the BladeRunner has become a regular in my drywall tool arsenal. Typical drywall cuts are a three-step process. You use a utility knife to score through the paper on one side of a sheet. You then snap the piece away from the cut side, and finish by cutting the paper on the back side to free it. The BladeRunner turns this into a two-step process by cutting the paper on both sides at once.

The tool has strongly magnetized top and bottom halves, each with a rolling cutting wheel much like a mini pizza cutter. They are stored held apart by two hinged, spring-loaded legs which fold in when you start a cut at the edge of a sheet. Now separated by the drywall, the two halves are magnetically held exactly opposite each other with their cutters lined up. By sliding the top piece along the cut line, the bottom piece drags along, and the cutters score both paper faces. As you finish a cut and run the tool off the other edge of the sheet, the hinged legs spring out, and the two halves reconnect, ready for the next cut.

Click here to read full article from Tools of the Trade