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Combine a holder and carbide insert to perform cutoff and grooving tasks on a lathe.
Pair these holders with a tool block for right- and left-hand mounting in a lathe.
Mount blade-style holders to a lathe tool post or turret.
Fit these holders directly into a lathe tool post or appropriately sized holder without the need for a tool block.
Cut square corner grooves in a workpiece or cut completely through a part.
The rounded nose on these inserts contours the outside of the workpiece and cuts grooves with rounded edges.
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.
Teeth are V-shaped teeth to cut on forward and backward strokes for fast cuts.
These blades have teeth that are coated in wear-resistant titanium nitride (TiN) so they last longer than blades with uncoated teeth.
Also known as demolition blades, these are wide for cutting through multiple layers of wood.
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 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.
A pointed tip makes plunge cuts in metal.
Cut in two directions with teeth on both sides of the blade.
The teeth are V-shaped to cut on forward and backward strokes for fast cuts through drywall.
Cut wood, metal, plastic, and drywall without changing blades.
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.
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.
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.
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.
With hardened teeth, these blades make precise cuts in screws, nails, thin-walled pipe, and other thin metals.
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.
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.
Make precise plunge cuts in the center of drywall with these sharp-toothed blades.