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The edge of the blade is segmented to cut faster than a continuous edge.
A continuous edge on these blades produces smooth cuts.
A continuous edge on these blades produces smooth cuts. It's coated in diamond grit to cut hard, abrasive materials such as masonry, stone, asphalt, and concrete.
Make cuts in hard, brittle materials such as firebrick, stone, and concrete.
The diamond-grit edge on these hole saws cuts more accurately, leaves a smoother finish, and lasts up to twice as long as carbide-grit-coated teeth.
These saws have carbide-grit-coated teeth.
The saws in these kits have carbide-grit-coated teeth that cut ceramic tile, fiberglass, masonry, plastic, and composites.
Blades are stainless steel with a diamond-grit edge that cuts hard, abrasive materials such as carbon fiber, ceramics, masonry, glass, composites, quartz, and silicon.
The edge of the blade is coated with diamond grit, which lasts longer than carbide grit.
Carbide grit is bonded to the edge of these blades.
These blades have carbide grit bonded to the edge.
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.
Carbide grit is bonded to the edge of these steel blades.
Use to make straight cuts in abrasive materials.
Also known as rodsaw blades, these cut in any direction, so they're a good choice for contoured cuts.
Use on cement, cinder block, brick, and veined stone.
Score, cut, and trim bricks and blocks.
Protect your hands from injury with the guard on these chisels. Use them to score, cut, and trim bricks and blocks.
Prevent injury with the plastic guard on these chisels. The blade tip is pointed to break up concrete, cement, cinder block, brick, and veined stone.
Swap accessories quickly and safely without tools.
These bits allow you to easily switch to another size by changing only the bit body. They are hollow and cut with their outside edge for drilling holes larger than 1 1/2" in diameter.
Drill holes up to 1 1/2" in diameter.
These hollow bits cut with their outside edge for drilling holes larger than 1 1/2" in diameter.
The SDS-Plus shank has two deep slots and two shallow slots for use with SDS-Plus-drive rotary hammers.
Also known as A-taper bits, these fit rotary hammers with a taper-shank chuck.
These bits have a round or hex shank that fits into the three-jaw chuck on a hammer drill.
Use these diamond-coated hollow bits for wet drilling of masonry, concrete, and rebar with a drilling rig.
The 1/4" hex shank allows these bits to be used with standard impact drivers.
A more controlled chip removal reduces heat buildup. Use these bits on brittle material such as block and brick.
The SDS-Max shank has three deep slots and two shallow slots for use with SDS-Max-drive rotary hammers.
Insert these bits directly into power screwdrivers, impact drivers, and other tools that accept 1/4" hex shanks.
Use these bits with handheld power drills, drill presses, and hammer drills.
A built-in stop ensures repeatable drilling depths for installing drop-in anchors.
Unlike traditional wire-installing drill bits, you do not need to strip the end of the wire when using one of these bits. After drilling, insert the wire into the bit's hollow shaft and pull through the hole.
A more controlled chip removal reduces heat buildup. Use these bits on brittle materials such as block and brick.
Drill holes using simultaneous rotary and hammering action to break masonry material into tiny granules.