steel circular saw blades
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steel circular saw blades
When I purchased my 1955 SS last year, included were a number of sharp but old steel circular saw blades. I've been told by an experienced woodworker that those are dangerous and I should get rid of them and buy carbide. Was wondering what others thought?
- edflorence
- Platinum Member
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- Location: Idaho Panhandle
Re: steel circular saw blades
It takes a good bit of skill and experience to get a steel blade really sharp, and a good carbide comes out of the package really sharp and stays sharp much, much longer than the steel blade will. Not sure why the steel would be less safe...I used them for years before switching to carbide...in fact I have heard that once in a while a carbide blade might throw one of the carbide teeth off while in use, which is potentially a very unsafe situation. If anyone has info on why a steel blade is less safe I would be really interested to hear it.
Ed
Idaho Panhandle
Mark 5 of various vintages, Mini with reversing motor, bs, dc3300, jointer, increaser, decreaser
Idaho Panhandle
Mark 5 of various vintages, Mini with reversing motor, bs, dc3300, jointer, increaser, decreaser
Re: steel circular saw blades
I grew up on steel blades. Nothing unsafe about them so long as they are sharp and in good condition. They are a bit of a pain to keep up, you need to sharpen and condition them often, a lot of work to do when you really want to just be cutting wood for your project. I'd love to have all those hours back that I spent on maintenance of steel blades....
When I grew up we didn't have money for new, or money to have someone else do the work so what we did have was the knowledge of how to do it yourself and we did.
After drooling over the new blades back in the early 1970's I finally got a carbide blade maybe about 1978 or 79 and I have never ever wanted a steel blade again. I actually have a couple of shopsmith blades that are brand new but steel and they will likely never be used by me. Perhaps they will become collectors items in another 50 years or so and worth some money to the grand kids if someone doesn't toss them out first.
Any blade can be unsafe if it damaged or dull or has some other issues but it is not limited to steel blades.
Ed
When I grew up we didn't have money for new, or money to have someone else do the work so what we did have was the knowledge of how to do it yourself and we did.
After drooling over the new blades back in the early 1970's I finally got a carbide blade maybe about 1978 or 79 and I have never ever wanted a steel blade again. I actually have a couple of shopsmith blades that are brand new but steel and they will likely never be used by me. Perhaps they will become collectors items in another 50 years or so and worth some money to the grand kids if someone doesn't toss them out first.
Any blade can be unsafe if it damaged or dull or has some other issues but it is not limited to steel blades.
Ed
{Knight of the Shopsmith} [Hero's don't wear capes, they wear dog tags]
Re: steel circular saw blades
I am not sure why one would use the word dangerous. A dull blade is dangerous. Carbide stays sharp for a long time, steel does not. If you use steel blades you must sharpen them more often. Simple as that.brianvw wrote:When I purchased my 1955 SS last year, included were a number of sharp but old steel circular saw blades. I've been told by an experienced woodworker that those are dangerous and I should get rid of them and buy carbide. Was wondering what others thought?
John & Mary Burger
Eagle's Lair Woodshop
Hooper, UT
Eagle's Lair Woodshop
Hooper, UT
Re: steel circular saw blades
I agree with what everyone else said. A sharp blade is what you need, no matter if it is carbide or not. A dull blade will not perform well, carbide or not.
Use what you have on hand. If it isn't sharp, sharpen it or replace it.
Use what you have on hand. If it isn't sharp, sharpen it or replace it.
Re: steel circular saw blades
Thanks for all the responses. Sounds like I'll invest in some good carbide blades and turn the old ones into clocks or throwing stars or something.
- dusty
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Re: steel circular saw blades
I have an alternative suggestion for those steel blades that are sharp. Set them aside to be used only with work pieces that are notoriously hard on blades (plywood and MDF).
Also hard on blades is reclaimed wood. If you have ever heard the sound of hitting an embedded nail or screw with your new carbide combo, you know what I mean.
Also hard on blades is reclaimed wood. If you have ever heard the sound of hitting an embedded nail or screw with your new carbide combo, you know what I mean.
"Making Sawdust Safely"
Dusty
Sent from my Dell XPS using Firefox.
Dusty
Sent from my Dell XPS using Firefox.
- ChrisNeilan
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Re: steel circular saw blades
dusty wrote:I have an alternative suggestion for those steel blades that are sharp. Set them aside to be used only with work pieces that are notoriously hard on blades (plywood and MDF).
Also hard on blades is reclaimed wood. If you have ever heard the sound of hitting an embedded nail or screw with your new carbide combo, you know what I mean.
Worse than that sound is dropping your dado stack on the concrete floor. Did that the other day after disassembling it. Got lucky.

I still have several steel blades that are sharp and do occasionally use them. Are they even still sold? It used to be that carbide tipped blades were priced out of my reach. Seem pretty cheap now (except for the very high end blades).
Re: steel circular saw blades
That hurts to just think about and I didn't even hear it drop.ChrisNeilan wrote:dusty wrote:
Worse than that sound is dropping your dado stack on the concrete floor. Did that the other day after disassembling it. Got lucky.![]()
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Re: steel circular saw blades
After drooling over the new blades back in the early 1970's I finally got a carbide blade maybe about 1978 or 79 and I have never ever wanted a steel blade again.canamsteelbuilding
Last edited by ClaudDKLyons on Thu Jul 09, 2015 12:53 am, edited 1 time in total.
