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Cutting new territory
Circular saw blades aren’t just
for wood anymore. With purpose-built blades, they can also tackle metal.
by Clair David Urbain
With the right saw and blade, you
can get through ferrous and non-ferrous metal as fast as a sugar addict can chew
through hard candy.
But the news in circular saws isn’t
all about metal cutting. Circular saw experts share their observations about the
new territory circular blades and saws are carving for themselves.
Wood
cutting
Blade costs continue to decrease for commodity wood-cutting circular blades.
“Wood cutting is now a value proposition. Users can get great blade prices when
they buy in bulk. The volume discounts yield lower costs,” says Shawn Horan,
group product manager for accessories at Milwaukee Electric Tool.
Even with the lower costs,
manufacturers continue to improve on well-proven designs, says Brad McMullen,
DeWalt senior product manager of saw blades.
“The most recent advance that has
spurred user interest is new blade coatings. They reduce friction and heat,
which means less wear and longer blade life. A coating can also reduce pitch
buildup and gumming when cutting manufactured wood or wet lumber,” McMullen
says.
For general framing work, the most
common blade used is the 7 1/4-inch diameter 24-tooth blade with carbide teeth,
says Steve Phillips, blade and accessories product manager at PrimeSource
Building Products, which recently introduced its own Grip-Rite blade line.
“As we develop our blade line, we
are benchmarking popular blade types and changing a few things. Our first blade
is the 24-tooth wood cutting blade. It meets the needs of framers and represents
a large percentage of the market. We are working on blades that decrease wobble
and increase cutting speed. We are focused on carbide quality and making sure
our tips are welded properly to ensure they won’t separate from the blade.”
Irwin has taken blade development to
a different level with a patented tooth configuration on its Marathon blade. The
blade has varying tooth widths that produce faster cuts with less effort when
compared with a thin-kerf blade. “This gives us 20 percent faster cutting vs.
the previous design without sacrificing durability. The first tooth cuts, then
the second tooth cuts and cleans up the wood edge,” says Lisa Rizzo, Irwin
circular saw blade product manager.
“The expansion slot configuration on
the new Marathon blade prevents blade warping on cross, rip and radius cuts. The
heat vents help with plate deflection and binding on deep cuts,” she says. By
optimizing the expansion slot and heat vent design, she says it’s easier to make
tougher cuts through thick materials and difficult arch cuts.
“The 7 1/4-inch diameter, 24-tooth
blades are a commodity, and one with a thin kerf and hard body will work well in
most framing applications. In some cases, opening price point or inexpensive
blades are a good choice,” says Chris Carlson, Bosch Power Tools and Accessories
saw blade product manager.
“However, higher cost blades offer
lots of advantages. They are often coated, have better carbide and use better
brazing processes that attach the carbide to the blade. Look at your
applications. We recommend an inexpensive blade for form work or for a
short-duration job where the blade may hit nails. There are various quality
blades at that level,” says Rick Gray, saw product manager at Bosch Power Tools
and Accessories.
Anti-kickback is another subtle
difference users will find with brands and price points of blades. “For example,
the plate of our Construction blade has an anti-kickback design. It has a pall
behind the tooth that helps control feed which helps reduce kickback,” says
Carlson. “Some blades have anti-vibration slots, which are laser-cut squiggles
in the plate. Some contractors like them, while others don’t. It creates some
flex in the blade, but it can reduce vibration and noise,” he adds.
The experts report that the lower
the blade’s tooth count, the faster and rougher the cut will be. Carlson
recommends an 18-tooth blade for bevel cuts at 50 or 60 degrees. “You can also
get a higher quality cut with a fewer-tooth blade by cutting slower,” he adds.
“Tooth angle can also affect blade
cutting speed,” says Gray. “With the short cuts used in stud work, a 10 to 15
percent faster cut is something a user can’t really perceive. What counts to
these types of users is blade durability. Changing out a blade in the middle of
a job is time consuming,” he says.
“We are also seeing lots of interest
in our nail cutter or remodeling blade,” says Carlson. “It has a low hook angle
and a reinforced tip that can take abuse. The low hook angle helps them chew or
chisel through nails,” he says.
Wood
cutting with cordless saws
Cordless circular saws are gaining in power and popularity, but still haven’t
replaced corded saws for high production jobs. Instead, these saws are most
popular with trades that do punchlist work or utility jobs.
“Cordless saw blades have a thinner
kerf. They remove less wood so there is less drain on the tool and therefore
more run time. There are different tooth angle grinds that also help battery run
time. There may be a slight trade-off on the finish of the cut,” says McMullen.
“Cordless saws have created an
interest in using thin kerf blades in corded saws,” says Carlson. “The first
cordless saws used thin kerf blades because it helped improve the number of cuts
per charge. Users quickly saw the advantage of cutting faster, so they are
moving toward thin kerf blades with corded tools. The new thin kerf blades are
also hardened. They remove less material and cut faster. This was very important
on early cordless saws.”
“The cordless blade development
that’s now underway is due to the increase in power of the Litheon Li-ion
battery system. The power is now there to cut. Just as in jigsaws and planers,
the new cordless circular saws work as well as their corded counterparts. It
really expands the usefulness of the tool,” says Gray.
What’s next for wood-cutting
circular saw blades? “Some of the innovations found in metal cutting may be
applied to wood cutting in the next few years,” says Horan.
Metal
cutting
Advances in metal-cutting saws and blades is perhaps one of the fastest growing
segments in sawing.
“Intuitively, cutting metal with a
circular saw isn’t something you’d expect to be able to do,” says Peg Thomas,
accessories product manager at Milwaukee Electric Tool. “Over the past three
years, there have been continual improvements to the technology.”
The new saws are capable of cutting
ferrous and non-ferrous materials. “There are different metal cutting blades for
different metals – aluminum, stainless steel and steel,” says Alan Peterson,
product manager at The M. K. Morse Co.
“We have steel and thin steel
blades. The thin steel blades are for material 1/8-inch thick or less. They have
more carbide tips and produce a finer edge. They can cut thicker steel, but the
cut will be slower and blade life will be shorter. These blade are more
expensive than the steel cutting blades, so cutting thicker material with the
thin steel cutting blade will cost you more per cut in time and in shorter blade
life,” says David Byrley, director of new product development at The M. K. Morse
Co.
“The thickness of the steel that can
be cut is driven more by the power of the saw than the design of the blade. The
blade for a conventional circular saw can cut steel up to 3/8-inch thick easily
as long as it is under RC 25,” says Peterson.
Metal
saw selection
The experts recommend using a purpose-built circular saw for cutting metal.
“Although conventional circular saws can be used with some blades, we recommend
using a special saw for high-volume cutting. Metal-cutting circular saws have a
lower rpm and higher torque so the power curve is flatter. These special
metal-cutting saws start at a lower rpm and then stay there throughout the cut,”
says Peterson. They also have a catch tray for metal chips, are more comfortable
and are built for repetitive cuts.
Different design approaches
“Metal cutting blade design is evolving,” says Thomas. “They are so much more
efficient than cutting with an abrasive blade or wheel. They offer a nice
finished edge that’s cool to the touch and can be handled right after the cut
without burning the skin. The cost per cut is low due to the fast cutting time
and the more cuts per blade.”
David Serdynski, associate product
manager at Milwaukee Electric Tool, encourages using metal-cutting saws. “They
have the proper guarding and power for the job,” he says.
This article originally appeared
in the May/June 2008 issue of Progressive Distributor. Copyright 2008.
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