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Teeth are carbide tipped and designed to push chips away from the blade to prevent clogging and produce smooth cuts in aluminum sheets, tubing, and T-slotted framing.
Make fast, clean cuts in steel sheets, angle iron, rebar, and pipe with the carbide teeth on these blades.
Prevent clogging when cutting soft metal—these blades have plenty of space between the carbide-tipped teeth to allow chips to escape.
Cut stainless steel sheets, pipe, tubing, and grating with teeth made of impact-resistant carbide.
Diamond grit bonded to a segmented edge cuts through hard metal such as cast iron.
Cut wood, plywood, and particleboard.
These blades have a heat-resistant coating to prevent material buildup.
Also known as dado-head blades, these are for cutting grooves in all types of wood.
Also known as rip blades, these steel blades have large, forward-angled, carbide-tipped teeth for making fast cuts.
Use these blades for occasional cutting.
Produce smooth cuts in plastic materials including polycarbonate, polyurethane, PVC, and acrylic with the carbide-tipped teeth on these blades.
Make clean cuts in rubber and plastic hose with the scalloped knife edge on these blades.
A blend of tungsten carbide and diamond grits on the continuous edge of this blade cuts hard, nonmetallic materials including composites and graphite.
The carbide-grit edge on these blades cuts brittle and abrasive materials including glass and fiberglass.
A continuous edge on these blades produces smooth cuts.
The edge of the blade is segmented to cut faster than a continuous edge.
A razor-sharp knife edge minimizes dust and makes quick, clean cuts through foam sheets such as expanded polystyrene insulation and extruded polystyrene.
Use with water or coolant to produce smoother cuts in tile than dry-cutting blades. They're also for use on glass.
Square-shaped teeth cut across the grain and with the grain (ripping) in reclaimed lumber and flooring with embedded nails.
A blend of tungsten carbide and diamond grits on the continuous edge of these blades cuts hard, nonmetallic materials including composites and graphite.
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.
Produce smooth cuts in plastic materials including polycarbonate, polyurethane, PVC, and acrylic with the carbide-tipped teeth on this blade.
Use these blades with water or coolant to produce smoother cuts in tile than dry-cutting blades. They're also for use on glass.
Convert a diamond arbor hole to a round arbor hole.
Reduce the diameter of a blade's arbor hole to fit your saw's arbor.
Protect and store your circular saw blades.
Ensure straight cuts—these stiffeners prevent blades from bending during use on stationary saws.