As stated above, I have seen them for sale - Diablo - Irwin - Dewalt -etc..... If you have used a blade of this type, please post your experiences ..... Thanks .... Mike :thumbup:
Printable View
As stated above, I have seen them for sale - Diablo - Irwin - Dewalt -etc..... If you have used a blade of this type, please post your experiences ..... Thanks .... Mike :thumbup:
I use them a lot. I have never had any luck with those mentioned. I tend to do better with the Evolution. I also use a steel cutting circular saw. A wood cutting saw cuts too fast for a smooth cut.
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0...?ie=UTF8&psc=1
I have used a John Deere metal circular saw and that one works really well. It has a lot of power and cuts really well.They work good for cutting most kinds of metal.You end up with a nice clean cut.
Are you talking about a blade used in a hand-held saw or a blade used in a cutoff saw that runs at a much slower RPM ?
I've cut metal with a variety of saws. Really depends on what type of material you are cutting. Bar steel you can use one of the abrasive type blades or something like a bi-metal reciprocating saw blade. Aluminum is soft enough to cut with a toothed blade in a chop saw or bandsaw as long as it has a fairly high tooth count (many small cuts). I don't think the brand is as important as matching the right blade to the material.
Do agree with matching the blade and tool to the material to be cut. I do use mostly the fiber blades even though they do go fast depending on the material they are less expensive and work well with clean cuts. I do have one of those dual oposite rotating blade angle grinder that cuts through anything with the added benefit of no kickback but have not used it much. I find I have the best control on the cut with the angle grinder and the fiber baldes....:thumbup: because they don't last that long Harbor frieght is my source whichever brand they carry at the time.
I have used a circular saw blade several times to cut 3/16" sheet. Made cuts up to six feet long with no issues. The blade I use is from Harbor Freight, yes that's right, not a typo. Cost of the blade is about $15.
Like yourself I use the fiber blades on my cutoff saw. Never have used the metal blades at home. Used some metal ones offshore and they cut better than the fiber ones. Fiber cost less and work good enough for me. Of course I always try and cut cost whenever I can.
David
:agree: .... I have used the 4 1/2" angle grinder type for years with excellent results .... the Diablo brand that HOME Depot sells is only ....1mm thick .... cuts like a hot knife thru butter .... I'm looking at a few options in this area also ..... Mike :thumbup:
I wish I knew what you guys are calling fiber blades, but we've cut a lot of steel siding in the form of ribbed sheets for building all of our barns. The blades we use in our hand circular saws are simply called "metal cut-off blades" by Ace. They're a black abrasive material (fiber?) which makes a clean cut and wears down after just a few sheets.
We always place two 2x4s or 2x6s on the ground a few inches apart, one on each side of the intended cut, to support the steel as we crawl along on top of the sheet while cutting.
In a pinch, we've used regular, toothed, steel blades attached backwards to our hand circular saw. It cuts okay but makes a lot of noise.
.... RG we are on the same page with this, as I said above I have used them in the 4 1/2" size but not 10" .... I just discovered they make them this large ( and much larger :yikes: )...... I don't see how your application could wear down the disc that fast ..... I have used mine on 1/2" thick stuff and it takes awhile to cut that but the wear wasn't bad at all ...... Thanks , Mike :thumbup:
We use 7". I didn't know about the 10" either, although my husband might, but we've never used one that big. I dunno why our blades don't last particularly long. Maybe the Ace brand, maybe the big ribs every few inches, or maybe our 16 pound Michigan moles are chomping on them when we're not looking.
I USE HF Tools for all of my small projects. Always a Good Value for the Money. BIG Jobs sometimes Require the REAL TOOLS. :banghead::banghead::banghead: Little Blue
just make damned sure you wear safety glasses
Here is the one I use. Dewalt 10x7/64x5/8 blade. Of course you may need a bigger arbor size. You can get them in a 14" also.
http://ACE.imageg.net/graphics/produ...1888enh-z7.jpg
David
That's it! This is what our ACE discs look like. Is this what you guys are calling fiber?