What are the thinest 90-120 tooth circular saw blades for 30mm or less mounting.
I am not happy with the search, I can not believe that companies are making 90-120 tooth blades that are meant for fine cutting and they are making them thicker kerf than 30 tooth. Do they actually know what they are doing. I do not understand this profession, I am new to it, though surely it is not logical to add extra width on the teeth that destroy wood and waste it. What do they think they are building?, a router! I remember there being blades with no extra kerf, the problem is that online’ they do not state all the technical information. I do not want any extra kerf blades. Is it better to get thin 1.7mm no extra kerf 30 tooth or something that splinters at 90-120 tooth because it is too thick. Someone clue me in.
I need a price range under £50, under £100 and over £100 for MDF fine cutting, 254mm D or less, 30mm M blades. No load speed 4500 rpm. TITAN TTB674TAS TABLE SAW.
Thanks, Robert.
Replies
Maybe we could help more if we knew what you're doing with the blade, or why you want a 90-120 tooth blade.
If I'm honest, usually the manufacturers do in fact know what they are doing and they're might be a good–albeit not obvious–reason you're having a hard time finding what you want.
I'd contact Forrest blades and see if their customer service can assist you in knowledge if not finding the right product. If they have it (or can make it) it'll be pricey, but at least you can ask the experts why they offer what they do.
You will be much happier with a 60 tooth blade with a triple chip grind if you are cutting mdf. The grind is more important than tooth count. A high tooth count is only good for very thin material. With a saw that small use a thin kerf blade, the newer thin kerf blades offer as good of cut as most regular kerf blades. If you have too many teeth you will have short blade life, burning in the cut and high motor draw.
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