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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.
The blade edge is coated in diamond grit.
These blades have a higher concentration of diamonds than other dry-cutting blades, so they last up to three times longer.
Use these blades with water or coolant to produce a smooth cut and minimize heat buildup
Make cuts in hard, brittle materials such as firebrick, stone, and concrete.
Ideal when working across multiple materials, these wheels are specially constructed to cut plastic, fiberglass, concrete, and ceramic, as well as metal.
Cut a variety of materials—from rubber to metal to stone.
From stone to rubber to metal—slice through a variety of materials with the same cutoff saw wheel.
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.
Carbide grit is bonded to the edge of these blades.
The edge of the blade is coated with diamond grit, which lasts longer than carbide grit.
These blades have carbide grit bonded to the edge.
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.
The saws in these kits have carbide-grit-coated teeth that cut ceramic tile, fiberglass, masonry, plastic, and composites.
These saws have carbide-grit-coated teeth.
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.
Cut holes in wood and plastic five times faster than standard hole saws and with fewer blade changes. The teeth on these saws are shaped to power through not only wood, particleboard, and plastic but also drywall, plaster, and even masonry. Made of carbide, the teeth are the hardest in our hole saw offering, so they stay sharp up to twice as long as high-speed steel teeth.
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.
Large, serrated teeth cut masonry such as brick and cinderblock.