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John:
Oddly the saw blade is one of those emotional issues and has a pile of emotional responses. I really do not know why, but it is real none the less. On my cabinet saw, I use a Frued Diablo I think a 60 tooth. It is a contractor grade and stays sharp for a long time. I have had mine for 2 years and had good results, clean cuts. I put a blade balancer with it and that made a big difference. I am of the opinion that like fishing lures catch more fishermen than fish, some woodworker tools sound better than they perform. I saw the Final Cut but I am skeptical of the continuous results. I have not proof, only and emotional response, and you know what that is worth (less). I have tried the Forrest blades and the Irwin blades. I think the Forrest are over rated and over priced. Oddly enough the Irwin blades were tested by one of the magazines recently and they rated high on value and performance.
You also do not mention if this is for a circular saw, chop saw, sliding miter, or table saw. The type of saw makes a big difference. My old contractor table saw never produced a decent cut no matter what I did. My Bosch 7 1/4" circular saw is OK and I am using a Matsushita combination, I also have a Irwin for change out. In my Bosch Sliding Miter I am using a Bosch blade, not for any other reason than that is what came with it. I will get a Frued Diablo for that saw as well when the time is ready for change. It has been my experience that each saw has its limit for what it can do, and that will affect the quality of the cut as well.I hope that helps a little.
Phil B.
Final Cut and TS2000? Forget it !!! That"s all marketing nonsense. I own 12 blade in all. Some came with saw purchases,and I don"t use them. You may need a Rip blade,cross cut blade and fine trime blade. It depends on the work you do. Then decide how manny teeth,what kind of teeth,and the design of the teeth. I"m a "blade changer",but that" me, If you"re looking for the "one blade" all I need i one,you"re in fantasy land. That being said,my suggestion:try the Freud Fusion,It may come close to what you"re you may be attenpting to accomplish.Your question requires lots of explanation: that may be why the responces are not as numerous,as you antisapated.See Dave at Peachtree.He offers a seminar on that topic,which goes into so much detail,I took notes,so I could remember everything.Getting educated requires work and determination on your part. Everyone has opions;you need the facts. Dave
Hi Phil,
I'm surprised that there's not any responses to this topic. I thought I would be flooded with comments of people using various saw blades. I want to do my homework and ask this question so that I don't buy a blade that I'm sorry for. The two that caught my eye but I'm skeptical about are the Final cut & the TS2000. Take the Final Cut for instance, it can cut various types of material without chipping and have a fine finish. It has the sanding disc attached that will almost eliminate finish sanding. But..... How long does this disc last and does it really perform like they say. The TS2000 does amazing fine cuts too. So what blade makes you say wow, what a great blade.
To answer your question about the saw I want to use it on, it's the Jet Left Tilt 3-Horsepower 10-Inch Cabinet Saw. This has been a very good table saw for me and now I want to compliment it with a great blade.
Thanks for replying Phil.
John
Phillip said:John:
Oddly the saw blade is one of those emotional issues and has a pile of emotional responses. I really do not know why, but it is real none the less. On my cabinet saw, I use a Frued Diablo I think a 60 tooth. It is a contractor grade and stays sharp for a long time. I have had mine for 2 years and had good results, clean cuts. I put a blade balancer with it and that made a big difference. I am of the opinion that like fishing lures catch more fishermen than fish, some woodworker tools sound better than they perform. I saw the Final Cut but I am skeptical of the continuous results. I have not proof, only and emotional response, and you know what that is worth (less). I have tried the Forrest blades and the Irwin blades. I think the Forrest are over rated and over priced. Oddly enough the Irwin blades were tested by one of the magazines recently and they rated high on value and performance.
You also do not mention if this is for a circular saw, chop saw, sliding miter, or table saw. The type of saw makes a big difference. My old contractor table saw never produced a decent cut no matter what I did. My Bosch 7 1/4" circular saw is OK and I am using a Matsushita combination, I also have a Irwin for change out. In my Bosch Sliding Miter I am using a Bosch blade, not for any other reason than that is what came with it. I will get a Frued Diablo for that saw as well when the time is ready for change. It has been my experience that each saw has its limit for what it can do, and that will affect the quality of the cut as well.I hope that helps a little.
Phil B.
I'm kind of a "blade changer" too! I have certain blades for certain things but it also depends on the job at hand. My main table saw blade is a Ridgid 50 tooth combination blade and it does graet for most things. Most of my crosscutting is done on a miter saw and both of my miter saws have Makita 70 tooth blades. I work at a home improvement store so I was able to get an extra Makita blade for free from the Makita rep because I'm pretty sure they don't sell that blade anywhere. If I'm cutting 2x4's I swap to a Dewalt 40 tooth blade on the miter saw and if ripping 2x4's I put the Dewalt blade on the table saw. I did just score a 60 tooth Dewalt blade for $5 on clearance and have yet to try it out but it'll probable be my new 2x4 crosscut blade on the miter saw. I guess the moral to the story is to have a 50-80 tooth blade for clean crosscuts, a combo blade or rip blade for ripping and 24-40 tooth blade for 2x4's. Just my 2 cents worth in a nut shell.
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