Preferred metal cutting circular saw blades?
Posted: Sun Jan 03, 2021 4:11 pm
I have a Milwaukee metal cutting circular saw, I've only ever used Milwaukee "General Purpose" metal cutting blades in it.
My saw is like this one, only beat up and dirty.
I need to order some more 8" blades and this time I'd like to get something for aluminum plate, steel plate up to that 1/4"-5/16" range, and a blade for thinner steel plate 16 gauge maybe 20 if possible.
This is all hobby level fooling around use for me, I have a horizontal bandsaw, I use the circular saw for stuff that doesn't fit in my bandsaw, so far all plate. I don't recall ever cutting any structural shapes.
With the Milwaukee blades I've never sharpened them, there are always enough carbide teeth missing I was sure that it wouldn't pay to send them to the saw shop.
I was eyeing up the Freud Diablo blades, for the money their wood blades are decent so I assume the metal version ain't too shabby either. But I know the carbide size on the wood ones is small so you can't get many sharpening's out of them, but again I'm knocking the teeth off anyway. Which I always assumed is a symptom of freehand cutting steel.
Or am I better off looking at something from Poplar Tools or Carbide Processors, Peak Tool, a more industrial blade so I can get a few regrinds?
Or am I just going to screw them up by knocking the teeth off too?
Got any suggestions or opinions on what to get or what to stay away from?
My saw is like this one, only beat up and dirty.
I need to order some more 8" blades and this time I'd like to get something for aluminum plate, steel plate up to that 1/4"-5/16" range, and a blade for thinner steel plate 16 gauge maybe 20 if possible.
This is all hobby level fooling around use for me, I have a horizontal bandsaw, I use the circular saw for stuff that doesn't fit in my bandsaw, so far all plate. I don't recall ever cutting any structural shapes.
With the Milwaukee blades I've never sharpened them, there are always enough carbide teeth missing I was sure that it wouldn't pay to send them to the saw shop.
I was eyeing up the Freud Diablo blades, for the money their wood blades are decent so I assume the metal version ain't too shabby either. But I know the carbide size on the wood ones is small so you can't get many sharpening's out of them, but again I'm knocking the teeth off anyway. Which I always assumed is a symptom of freehand cutting steel.
Or am I better off looking at something from Poplar Tools or Carbide Processors, Peak Tool, a more industrial blade so I can get a few regrinds?
Or am I just going to screw them up by knocking the teeth off too?
Got any suggestions or opinions on what to get or what to stay away from?