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The teeth on these blades vary in size and pattern to reduce vibration and produce smooth cuts. They're also known as variable-set blades.
These are stiffer than other blades for making straight cuts in a wide range of materials including metal, plastic, and wood.
The teeth on these blades are carbide-tipped so they last longer than long-life blades with coated teeth.
Teeth are coated with titanium nitride (TiN) for wear resistance and longer life than uncoated teeth.
Also known as demolition blades, these wide blades cut through multiple layers.
Also known as variable-set blades, the teeth on these vary in size and pattern to reduce vibration and produce smooth cuts.
Tooth size and number per inch are constant throughout the blade.
Wide enough to cut through multiple layers, these blades are also known as demolition blades. They’re also called variable-set blades thanks to their teeth that vary in size, number per inch, and pattern, which limits vibration. This keeps your cuts stable and straight without requiring much effort.
Wide enough to cut through multiple layers quickly, these blades are often called demolition blades. With carbide-tipped teeth, they stay sharp at least 50 times longer than bimetal blades with high-speed steel teeth.
Cut tight curves with a narrow blade. It's also known as a scroll-cutting blade.
These blades have uncoated teeth.
The teeth on these blades are set in a pattern specially designed to cut faster than other blades for metal.
Teeth are coated with wear-resistant titanium nitride (TiN) so they last longer than blades with uncoated teeth.
These blades are wide to cut through multiple layers. They're also known as demolition blades.
Also known as demolition blades, these wide blades cut through multiple layers of metal quickly.
A pointed tip makes plunge cuts in metal.
Also known as scroll-cutting blades, these are narrow to cut tight curves.
Attach these blades to your reciprocating saw to remove grout from between tiles.
Carbide grit is bonded to the edge of these steel blades.
The diamond grit bonded to the edge of these steel blades lasts up to 30 times longer and cuts twice as fast as carbide grit.
Also known as demolition blades, these blades are wide enough to cut through multiple layers of wood quickly. They’ll also stay sharp 50 times longer than blades with high-speed steel teeth thanks to their carbide-tipped teeth.
Also known as demolition blades, these are wide for cutting through multiple layers of wood.
These blades are stiffer than other blades for making straight cuts in wood.
Cut close to floors and walls. The truss design keeps the blade rigid for straight cuts
These blades have teeth that are coated in wear-resistant titanium nitride (TiN) so they last longer than blades with uncoated teeth.
Teeth are V-shaped teeth to cut on forward and backward strokes for fast cuts.
Tooth size and number per inch are constant throughout these blades.
Produce smooth cuts—the teeth vary in size and pattern to reduce vibration. They're also known as variable-set blades.
The teeth are V-shaped to cut on forward and backward strokes for fast cuts through drywall.
Cut in two directions with teeth on both sides of the blade.
Whether you’re cutting metal, plastic, or wood, keep a set of blades on hand to complete any reciprocating saw job.
For a longer life than blades with a high-speed steel body, these blades have a carbon steel body that’s more flexible and less breakable.
These progressive-tooth blades have small, fine teeth at the shank end that gradually increase to larger teeth at the tip for fast cutting.
Small, fine teeth at the shank end of this progressive-tooth blade gradually increase to larger teeth at the tip for fast cuts.
With carbide-tipped teeth—the hardest in our jigsaw blade offering—these blades last longer than bimetal blades.
The teeth at the shank end of this progressive tooth blade are small and fine and gradually increase to larger teeth at the tip for fast cutting.
Cut wood without leaving behind rough edges—these blades have teeth pointed in two directions to smooth both sides of your material as you cut.
The teeth on this carbon steel blade are high-speed steel, so it lasts longer than the standard t-shank blades for plastic. It's also known as a bimetal blade.
Also known as a bimetal blade, this carbon steel blade has high-speed steel teeth and lasts longer than high-speed steel blades.
These bimetal blades have a carbon steel body and high-speed steel teeth that last up to four times longer than carbon steel teeth.
A selection of U-shank jigsaw blades for a variety of applications is included in these assortments.
Keep a convenient mix of jigsaw blades on hand. Whether you’re making smooth cuts in wood or rough-cutting metal, these sets have you covered.
With teeth ground into a forward angle, these blades cut faster and remove 30% more material with each stroke than long-life blades. The teeth are hardened high-speed steel, so the blades last twice as long as blades with carbon steel teeth.
With high-speed steel teeth, these blades last twice as long as blades with carbon steel teeth.
This progressive-tooth blade has small, fine teeth that gradually increase to large teeth for fast cuts.
Made of carbon steel, these blades have hardened, sharp teeth that bite into and cut soft materials such as mild steel, copper, plastic, and wood.
Be ready for a variety of hacksaw jobs—each blade in these sets differs in teeth per inch.
Cut wood, metal, plastic, and drywall without changing blades or losing sharpness. They stay sharp for 30 times longer than bimetal blades that have high-speed steel teeth.
With teeth made of a specialized carbide blend, these blades stay sharp 100 times longer than blades with high-speed steel teeth. The geometry of the teeth cuts through screws, nails, thin-walled pipe, and other thin metals.
With hardened teeth, these blades make precise cuts in screws, nails, thin-walled pipe, and other thin metals.
These blades have the longest life in our oscillating tool blade offering—they’ll stay sharp 100 times longer than bimetal blades with high-speed steel teeth. Use them to cut through wood, metal, plastic, and drywall without changing blades.
Cut wood, metal, plastic, and drywall without changing blades.
The carbide-tipped teeth on these blades contain titanium and cobalt, so they stay sharp 50 times longer than bimetal blades with high-speed steel teeth. They’re shaped to quickly cut through screws, nails, thin-walled pipe, and other thin metals.
With carbide-tipped teeth that contain titanium and cobalt, these blades stay sharp 50 times longer than bimetal blades with high-speed steel teeth. The teeth are shaped to cut wood without leaving burn marks.
The teeth on these blades are shaped to cut wood without leaving burn marks.
Cut wood twice as fast as standard oscillating tool blades. Also known as Japanese tool blades, each tooth has three bevels ground into it for increased sharpness.