A nice review but for all of those watching. Please wear a face shield in addition to safety glasses especially when using that 4 1/2 inch grinder. The grinding wheels and discs have been known to explode. I heard of a guy having facial injuries and loosing a bunch of teeth when a grinding wheel exploded. We don't always get a second chance. Please Safety First!
@davi200 Yup got it. What I meant to say was when you get near the end of your cut, back off the pressure on the saw. You should get little to no burrs.
@AllenTrucks It really depends on the type of metal you cut with it, and its thickness. Mine lasted quite awhile then started to take more effort to cut thru things. I sent the blade off to Burns Tools and had it resharpened for around $35 and it cuts like its brand new. It should be able to be resharpened 4 or 5 more times. $35 beats $120 for a new one. Thanks for watching!
Yes, I failed to mention cutting stainless steel. The 72 tooth blade is not recommended for stainless. For stainless the 90 tooth blade is the one to use. Circular Saw Blade 14 in. 90 Tooth Dry Cut Carbide Tipped 48-40-4510.
A nice review but for all of those watching. Please wear a face shield in addition to safety glasses especially when using that 4 1/2 inch grinder. The grinding wheels and discs have been known to explode. I heard of a guy having facial injuries and loosing a bunch of teeth when a grinding wheel exploded. We don't always get a second chance. Please Safety First!
JWWUSC 3 weeks ago
@JWWUSC Yes. Good observation. Thanks.
davi200 3 weeks ago
Let the saw do the work and you won't get any burrs.
valveman12 7 months ago
@valveman12 If you don't give it sufficient downpressure on the saw the blade just tends to skip, so I think a little bit of a burr is inevitable.
davi200 3 weeks ago
@davi200 Yup got it. What I meant to say was when you get near the end of your cut, back off the pressure on the saw. You should get little to no burrs.
valveman12 3 weeks ago
@valveman12 Yeah, I'll give that a try. Thanks.
davi200 3 weeks ago
how long do those blades for the saw last, do they stay sharp, can you have them sharpened
AllenTrucks 11 months ago
@AllenTrucks It really depends on the type of metal you cut with it, and its thickness. Mine lasted quite awhile then started to take more effort to cut thru things. I sent the blade off to Burns Tools and had it resharpened for around $35 and it cuts like its brand new. It should be able to be resharpened 4 or 5 more times. $35 beats $120 for a new one. Thanks for watching!
davi200 11 months ago
@AllenTrucks Yes, you can get them resharpened. I have only had to do that once so far.
davi200 3 weeks ago
Good detail and comparison to the abrasive cutoff wheel. Nice job. Thanks.
glowitz 1 year ago
so can u use the 90 blade on normal metal pipes?
manadio 2 years ago
@manadio Yes, but I think the rate of cut would rate would be slower.
davi200 2 years ago
nice saw i have a Hitachi cd14f up for sale il take $280 needs a blade sharping. other then that its like brand new. pm if interested
tacooooowill 2 years ago
@tacooooowill Yep, looks like a lot of people are trying to sell their Hitachi saws. Why are you trying to get rid of yours?
davi200 2 years ago
muy buena maquina, estoy apunto de comprarla solo falta mencionar en este video los cortes en acero inoxidable(stainless steel)
Peponie 2 years ago
Yes, I failed to mention cutting stainless steel. The 72 tooth blade is not recommended for stainless. For stainless the 90 tooth blade is the one to use. Circular Saw Blade 14 in. 90 Tooth Dry Cut Carbide Tipped 48-40-4510.
davi200 2 years ago