p111dom":3brsbksq said:
I thought neg rake blades were only for sliding mitre saws and non ferrous metals. Didn't think it made a difference on a fixed mitre saw or a table.
Negative rake blades are generally only suitable for use in overhead saws where, as George N says. There's an earlier thread
here which discusses the why's and wherefores in detail, including some rather natty drawings (if I say so myself).
That's not to say that you can't use a negative rake blade in a table saw - it's one way of cutting laminates, e.g. MFC, MF-MDF, etc cleanly, but
be aware that the clean cut comes at a much greater risk of kickback so take precautions and use minimum blade projection and appropriate push-sticks
OPJ":3brsbksq said:
Theoretically, you can use one blade to perform most tasks when ripping or cross-cutting softwood, hardwood or sheet material...
In the words of the comic, "I don't think so...."
OPJ":3brsbksq said:
As mentioned above; positive hook for ripping, negative for cross-cuts.
Now I really don't agree. Table saws require a positive rake for almost all cuts. Zero rake or negative rake will almost always induce kickback in cutting and so are not to be recommended for such tasks. Overhead saws, on the other hand, require negaitive rake for the reasons given in my earlier detailed explanation (link above)
OPJ":3brsbksq said:
Even then, you can get further variations on saw blades - some are designed to cut hardwood rather than softwood.
I think that you'd have to look a while to find any TCT blade which says "softwood only" or "hardwood only" (yes I know that Freud specifically market some of their blades as being for hardwood). The main distinctions are between types of cut (rip, combination, cross cut trim/mitre) and type material (solid timber, wet timber, plywood, MDF, laminated man-mades, plastics, etc)
Cheap blades, though, so maybe worth a punt
Scrit