I want a circular saw blade, primarily to make fine finish rip cuts in
hardwood. I have a DW62 which takes 184mm blades. The standard Dewalt
18 teeth blade cuts a little rough. I see I can easily get a Freud 24T
or 40T general purpose blade. Does anyone have a recommendation on
whether the 24T or 40T is best? Or on any other rip blade I could get
in the UK.
By the way, the Bevel adjustment on the Dewalt looks a bit fiddly to
get an exact 90 degrees cut. And the degree markings don't seem to
align properly. I've still some more playing around to do, but a post
of any others experiences very welcome.
Thanks
Rob
Hi Rob,
A "finish" rip cut is a rather tall order for a circular saw. A TS with
a very good blade (e.g., WW II) will do it, otherwise plan on cleaning
the cut with a plane or router, that's my 2=A2.
But if you're determined, a combo blade will make a more "finished" cut
than a ripping blade, so you might try the 24T Freud. You don't mention
what wood and how thick it is, and that's an important consideration.
Another thing you might try is to use an ultra-thin rip or combo blade,
such as you find for cordless saws (6-1/2" dia, but again this depends
on the thickness of what you're cutting). The thinner blade might be
able to push a "combo" tooth configuration through the wood you have.
Good luck,
H=2E
Rob S wrote:
> I want a circular saw blade, primarily to make fine finish rip cuts
in
> hardwood. I have a DW62 which takes 184mm blades. The standard
Dewalt
> 18 teeth blade cuts a little rough. I see I can easily get a Freud
24T
> or 40T general purpose blade. Does anyone have a recommendation on
> whether the 24T or 40T is best? Or on any other rip blade I could
get
> in the UK.
>
> By the way, the Bevel adjustment on the Dewalt looks a bit fiddly to
> get an exact 90 degrees cut. And the degree markings don't seem to
> align properly. I've still some more playing around to do, but a
post
> of any others experiences very welcome.
>=20
> Thanks=20
> Rob
Cutting against a straightedge makes a lot of difference. Don't depend upon
the saw's ripguide. Cut slowly, from the back side.
Wilson
"Rob S" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I want a circular saw blade, primarily to make fine finish rip cuts in
> hardwood. I have a DW62 which takes 184mm blades. The standard Dewalt
> 18 teeth blade cuts a little rough. I see I can easily get a Freud 24T
> or 40T general purpose blade. Does anyone have a recommendation on
> whether the 24T or 40T is best? Or on any other rip blade I could get
> in the UK.
>
> By the way, the Bevel adjustment on the Dewalt looks a bit fiddly to
> get an exact 90 degrees cut. And the degree markings don't seem to
> align properly. I've still some more playing around to do, but a post
> of any others experiences very welcome.
>
> Thanks
> Rob
>
On 3 Apr 2005 13:55:59 -0700, "Rob S" <[email protected]> wrote:
>I want a circular saw blade, primarily to make fine finish rip cuts in
>hardwood. I have a DW62 which takes 184mm blades. The standard Dewalt
>18 teeth blade cuts a little rough. I see I can easily get a Freud 24T
>or 40T general purpose blade. Does anyone have a recommendation on
>whether the 24T or 40T is best? Or on any other rip blade I could get
>in the UK.
>
>By the way, the Bevel adjustment on the Dewalt looks a bit fiddly to
>get an exact 90 degrees cut. And the degree markings don't seem to
>align properly. I've still some more playing around to do, but a post
>of any others experiences very welcome.
I just use a square on mine, and I've never had a problem. I'm not
sure that I ever used the degree markings- I never trust those things.
>Thanks
>Rob
Aut inveniam viam aut faciam