Blade Types by Cut Application
Different cuts require different blade designs. Understanding blade types helps you choose the right tool for each job, resulting in cleaner cuts and safer operation.
Ripping Blades
24-30 TeethDesigned for cutting along the wood grain (ripping boards to width). Features large gullets to clear chips quickly and FTG tooth geometry for fast, aggressive cuts.
- Tooth Count: 24-30T for 10" blades
- Geometry: FTG (Flat Top Grind)
- Hook Angle: 20-24 degrees (aggressive)
- Best For: Ripping solid lumber, breaking down rough stock
- Cut Quality: Fast but rough; requires jointing/planing after
Crosscut Blades
60-80 TeethOptimized for cutting across the wood grain. High tooth count with ATB geometry creates a shearing action that severs wood fibers cleanly without tear-out.
- Tooth Count: 60-80T for 10" blades
- Geometry: ATB (Alternate Top Bevel)
- Hook Angle: 5-15 degrees (less aggressive)
- Best For: Crosscuts, miters, trim work, fine joinery
- Cut Quality: Glass-smooth, minimal sanding needed
Combination Blades
40-50 TeethThe Swiss Army knife of saw blades. Designed to handle both ripping and crosscutting without blade changes. Uses groups of teeth with different geometries.
- Tooth Count: 40-50T for 10" blades (typically 40T)
- Geometry: ATBR (ATB + Raker) in 4+1 pattern
- Hook Angle: 15-20 degrees (moderate)
- Best For: General woodworking, small shops, infrequent blade changes
- Cut Quality: Good for both operations; not best at either
Plywood/Panel Blades
60-80 TeethSpecialized for cutting veneered plywood and sheet goods. Features Hi-ATB tooth geometry with steep bevel angles to score the veneer before cutting through.
- Tooth Count: 60-80T for 10" blades
- Geometry: Hi-ATB (High Alternate Top Bevel, 30-40 degrees)
- Hook Angle: 10-15 degrees
- Best For: Hardwood plywood, baltic birch, veneer core panels
- Cut Quality: Chip-free on both faces
Melamine/Laminate Blades
80-96 TeethBuilt for the demanding requirements of melamine, laminate, and other coated materials. TCG geometry handles abrasive surfaces without chipping.
- Tooth Count: 80-96T for 10" blades
- Geometry: TCG (Triple Chip Grind)
- Hook Angle: -5 to 5 degrees (negative or neutral)
- Best For: Melamine, laminate, Corian, abrasive composites
- Cut Quality: Chip-free on brittle surfaces
Saw Blade Tooth Count Guide
Tooth count determines cut quality and feed rate. More teeth mean smoother cuts but slower feed speeds. Match tooth count to your application for optimal results.
| Tooth Count | Category | Cut Speed | Cut Quality | Best Applications |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 24T | Ripping | Very Fast | Rough | Ripping solid lumber, breaking down rough stock, framing |
| 30T | Ripping | Fast | Moderate | General ripping, hardwood ripping with cleaner edge |
| 40T | Combination | Moderate | Good | General purpose, ripping and crosscutting, most common blade |
| 50T | Combination | Moderate | Very Good | Fine combination work, quality crosscuts with some ripping |
| 60T | Crosscut | Slower | Excellent | Crosscuts, plywood, veneered materials, trim work |
| 80T | Fine Crosscut | Slow | Superior | Fine crosscuts, melamine, delicate veneers, final cuts |
| 96T+ | Specialty | Very Slow | Maximum | Melamine, laminate flooring, non-ferrous metals |
The 3x Rule for Tooth Count
For any given cut, aim to have at least 3 teeth in the material at all times. This ensures smooth cutting and prevents the blade from grabbing. For a 3/4" board, a 40T 10" blade maintains about 4 teeth in contact - perfect for general work.
Saw Blade Sizes
Blade diameter must match your saw. Using the wrong size is dangerous and will result in poor cuts. Here are the common sizes and their applications.
Circular Saws
- Max Depth: ~2-3/8" at 90 degrees
- RPM Range: 5,000-5,800 RPM
- Common Tools: Handheld circular saws, worm drive saws
- Typical Tooth Counts: 24T (framing), 40T (general), 60T (finish)
Table Saws & Miter Saws
- Max Depth: ~3-1/8" at 90 degrees (table saw)
- RPM Range: 3,000-4,000 RPM (table), 4,000-5,000 RPM (miter)
- Common Tools: Table saws, 10" miter saws, radial arm saws
- Typical Tooth Counts: 24T-80T (full range available)
Miter Saws & Cabinet Saws
- Max Depth: ~4" at 90 degrees
- RPM Range: 3,200-4,000 RPM
- Common Tools: 12" miter saws, some cabinet table saws
- Typical Tooth Counts: 40T-96T
Safety Warning: Never Use Wrong Size Blades
Never use a smaller blade than rated for your saw - it creates dangerous exposure. Never use a larger blade - it won't fit properly and can cause kickback. Always verify the arbor hole size matches your saw's arbor.
Tooth Geometry Explained
Tooth geometry determines how the blade cuts material. Each design has specific strengths that make it ideal for certain applications.
Alternate Top Bevel
Teeth are ground at alternating 10-20 degree angles, creating a shearing action. The left-angled tooth scores one side of the kerf while the right-angled tooth scores the other.
Use ATB for: Crosscutting solid wood, general purpose cutting, miter cuts in hardwood
Flat Top Grind
Teeth are ground flat across the top like tiny chisels. This aggressive geometry removes material quickly but doesn't sever cross-grain fibers cleanly.
Use FTG for: Ripping lumber, breaking down stock, any cut where you'll joint or plane the edge after
Triple Chip Grind
Alternates between a "chamfered" tooth (corners cut off at 45 degrees) and a flat raker tooth. The chamfered tooth scores corners while the raker cleans the center.
Use TCG for: Melamine, laminate, MDF, particleboard, non-ferrous metals, dense hardwoods
High Alternate Top Bevel
Same concept as ATB but with steeper bevel angles (30-40 degrees). The aggressive angle scores delicate veneers before the tooth passes through.
Use Hi-ATB for: Hardwood plywood, veneer-faced panels, baltic birch, any material with thin face veneer
Quick Geometry Selection
Unsure which geometry to choose? Use this rule: ATB for solid wood, TCG for manufactured materials with coatings, Hi-ATB for plywood, FTG only for dedicated ripping.
Kerf Thickness: Thin vs Full Kerf
Kerf is the width of the cut made by the blade. Choosing between thin and full kerf depends on your saw's power and your cutting requirements.
Thin Kerf
- Requires less motor power (ideal for contractor saws)
- Less material waste (important for expensive lumber)
- Easier cuts through thick hardwood
- Less heat buildup during cuts
- Standard for cordless and job site saws
- More blade flex can cause wandering
- May require stabilizers for thin stock
- Wears faster than full kerf
Full Kerf
- Maximum stability and accuracy
- Flatter, straighter cuts
- Better heat dissipation
- Longer blade life
- Professional-grade results
- Requires 3HP+ motor for best results
- More material waste
- Slower cuts in thick stock
Material to Blade Recommendation Chart
Quick reference for selecting the right blade based on the material you're cutting.
| Material | Tooth Count | Geometry | Hook Angle | Recommended Blades |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Softwood (Ripping) | 24-30T | FTG | 20-24 deg | Freud LM72, Forrest Woodworker I |
| Hardwood (Ripping) | 24-30T | FTG | 18-22 deg | Diablo D1024X, CMT 226.024 |
| Softwood (Crosscut) | 60-80T | ATB | 10-15 deg | Freud LU85, Diablo D1060X |
| Hardwood (Crosscut) | 60-80T | ATB | 5-12 deg | Forrest Chopmaster, Freud LU87 |
| General Purpose | 40-50T | ATBR | 15-20 deg | Forrest WWII, Freud LU84, Diablo D1050X |
| Hardwood Plywood | 60-80T | Hi-ATB | 10-15 deg | Freud LU79, Diablo D0860S |
| Baltic Birch | 80T | Hi-ATB | 10-12 deg | Freud LU80, CMT 219.080 |
| Melamine/Laminate | 80-96T | TCG | -5 to 5 deg | Freud LU98, Diablo D1080N |
| MDF | 60-80T | ATB or TCG | 10-15 deg | Freud LU79, CMT 223.072 |
| OSB/Particleboard | 40-60T | ATB | 15-18 deg | Diablo D1040X, Freud D1040A |
Table Saw Blades
Table saws are the workhorses of woodworking shops. Choosing the right blade maximizes your saw's potential and produces professional results.
Essential Table Saw Blade Collection
40-50T Combination Blade
Your primary blade for 80% of table saw work. Handles ripping and crosscutting with good results on both. Start here if you can only afford one quality blade.
24T Ripping Blade
Add this when you do significant ripping. Dramatically faster when resawing or breaking down lumber. The time savings justify a blade change.
60-80T Crosscut Blade
For final dimension cuts on furniture and cabinets. When edge quality matters and you don't want to sand or joint after cutting.
80T Plywood/Panel Blade
Essential if you work with veneered sheet goods. Prevents the tearout that ruins expensive plywood. Worth it for the first expensive panel you save.
Miter Saw Blades
Miter saws primarily make crosscuts and miter cuts. Blade selection focuses on clean cuts across the grain, especially on trim and molding.
Miter Saw Blade Requirements
- Higher RPM: Miter saws run 3,200-5,000 RPM vs 3,000-4,000 for table saws. Ensure blade is rated for your saw's speed.
- Negative Hook Angle: Many woodworkers prefer negative or low-positive hook angles (0-10 degrees) for safer, smoother cuts.
- 60-80 Tooth Minimum: Since you're almost always crosscutting, higher tooth counts are standard.
- Thin Kerf Benefits: Reduces motor strain on sliding miter saws making long crosscuts.
Recommended Miter Saw Blades
| Application | Blade Type | Top Picks |
|---|---|---|
| Fine Trim/Molding | 80T ATB, negative hook | Forrest Chopmaster, Freud LU91 |
| General Crosscuts | 60T ATB | Diablo D1060X, Freud LU85 |
| Framing/Construction | 40-60T ATB | Diablo D1040X, DeWalt DW3106 |
| Hardwood Flooring | 80T TCG | Freud LU98, Makita A-93681 |
Circular Saw Blades
Circular saws demand blades that cut efficiently with handheld power and weight constraints. The 7-1/4" blade dominates this category.
Circular Saw Blade Considerations
- High RPM Operation: Circular saws run 5,000-5,800 RPM. Blades must be rated for these speeds.
- Thin Kerf Standard: Most circular saw blades are thin kerf to reduce motor strain and battery drain on cordless models.
- Cutting Position: Blade cuts from bottom up, so good face goes DOWN to prevent tear-out on the visible side.
- Aggressive Hook Angles: 18-22 degree hook angles help the blade pull through the cut efficiently.
Circular Saw Blade Chart
| Tooth Count | Application | Cut Quality | Top Picks |
|---|---|---|---|
| 18-24T | Framing, demolition, fast cuts | Rough | Diablo D0724A, DeWalt DW3578 |
| 40T | General purpose, remodeling | Good | Diablo D0740A, Freud D0740A |
| 60T | Finish cuts, plywood | Excellent | Diablo D0760A, Makita A-94839 |
When to Replace or Sharpen Blades
Knowing when a blade needs attention prevents poor cuts, dangerous kickback, and damage to your workpiece.
Signs Your Blade Needs Sharpening
- Burn marks: Dark scorching on cut edges, especially in hardwoods
- Increased resistance: You're pushing harder than usual
- Chip-out/tear-out: Cuts that used to be clean now splinter
- Motor strain: Saw sounds like it's working harder
- Dust quality: Fine powder instead of chips (blade is rubbing, not cutting)
- Rough edges: Cut surfaces feel fuzzy or rough
When to Replace vs Sharpen
- Sharpen: Dull teeth with no visible damage (3-5 sharpenings possible)
- Replace: Chipped or broken carbide tips
- Replace: Warped or bent blade plate
- Replace: Significant carbide wear past the initial tip shape
- Replace: Rust or corrosion affecting the blade body
- Sharpen: Blade cuts rough but teeth appear intact
Sharpening Economics
Professional sharpening costs $15-30 per blade. A quality 10" blade costs $50-120. Blades can typically be sharpened 3-5 times, making sharpening very cost-effective. Find a reputable sharpening service and sharpen premium blades rather than replacing budget blades.
Blade Cleaning Tips
Clean blades cut better, run cooler, and last longer. Pitch and resin buildup increases friction and causes burning.
Remove the Blade Safely
Unplug the saw or remove the battery. Use the blade lock and wrench to remove the blade carefully.
Apply Cleaning Solution
Use a commercial blade cleaner (CMT, Trend, Freud) or make your own with Simple Green and water. Spray generously and let soak 5-10 minutes.
Scrub the Teeth and Gullets
Use a brass brush or stiff nylon brush. Scrub each tooth and the gullets between them. Don't use steel brushes - they can damage carbide.
Rinse and Dry Immediately
Rinse with clean water. Dry immediately with a clean cloth to prevent rust on the blade body. Apply a light coat of paste wax or dry lubricant.
Cleaning Frequency
Clean blades after every 8-10 hours of use, or whenever you notice increased resistance. Cutting resinous woods (pine, cherry) or glued materials requires more frequent cleaning.
Top Blade Recommendations
These blades represent the best value and performance in each category, trusted by professional woodworkers.
Woodworker II WW10407125 10" 40T
Best Overall- Legendary cut quality for rip and crosscut
- Hand-tensioned in USA for perfect flatness
- C-4 long-lasting carbide teeth
- Free sharpening service available
LU84R011 10" 50T Combination
Best Value Combo- Excellent ripping and crosscutting in one blade
- TiCo Hi-Density carbide for 4x longer life
- Perma-Shield non-stick coating
- Anti-vibration laser cuts for quiet operation
D1060X 10" 60T Fine Finish
Best Crosscut Value- Laser-cut stabilizer vents reduce vibration
- Perma-Shield coating resists heat and gumming
- TiCo shock-resistant carbide
- Ultra-smooth crosscuts in hardwood and softwood
D1050X 10" 50T Combination
Best Budget Combo- Ideal for ripping and crosscutting wood
- TiCo Hi-Density carbide stays sharp 4x longer
- Perma-Shield non-stick coating
- Outstanding value for the performance
LU79R010 10" 80T Plywood/Melamine
Best Plywood- 40-degree Hi-ATB grind prevents veneer tearout
- Chip-free cuts on both faces
- Excellent for melamine and laminate
- Thin kerf requires less power
Woodworker I WW10607100 10" 60T
Best Premium Crosscut- Glass-smooth crosscuts in hardwood
- Hand-tensioned for precision flatness
- Made in USA with premium carbide
- Professional woodworkers' top choice
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