I have just bought a 10" tablesaw that will actually take up to 270mm blades. It quotes a max 90 degree cut at 95mm. Whilst handy for tapering table legs, I cant see myself needing to use it to that capacity often, so am wondering about blade sizes, tooth counts etc.
I am likely to cut a bit of sheet material, from 4 or 6mm mdf to 18mm ply or mdf. Maybe a bit of veneered sheet material in similar sizes. most of my projects are in 1" or less hardwood, and a decent proportion in 1/2" or thereabouts. The majority of the hardwood work will be rip cuts, requiring a decent finish if possible. Cross cutting can be done on the RAS, so not really a top priority.
CAVEAT- Anything used will be with an appropriate riving knife and guarding.
Is there any advantage or disadvantage to using a larger or smaller blade than the normal 10" blade in the saw, other than maximum depth of cut? I am thinking particularly of the relative number of teeth, or lack thereof between an 8" and 10" blade, obviously the same tooth count on the different sizes will mean different spacing. There is also a difference in the angle of the blade hitting the timber, in a similar way that there is at different blade heights.
Or do you just buy as large a blade as will fit in an appropriate tooth count for each major task?
I am likely to cut a bit of sheet material, from 4 or 6mm mdf to 18mm ply or mdf. Maybe a bit of veneered sheet material in similar sizes. most of my projects are in 1" or less hardwood, and a decent proportion in 1/2" or thereabouts. The majority of the hardwood work will be rip cuts, requiring a decent finish if possible. Cross cutting can be done on the RAS, so not really a top priority.
CAVEAT- Anything used will be with an appropriate riving knife and guarding.
Is there any advantage or disadvantage to using a larger or smaller blade than the normal 10" blade in the saw, other than maximum depth of cut? I am thinking particularly of the relative number of teeth, or lack thereof between an 8" and 10" blade, obviously the same tooth count on the different sizes will mean different spacing. There is also a difference in the angle of the blade hitting the timber, in a similar way that there is at different blade heights.
Or do you just buy as large a blade as will fit in an appropriate tooth count for each major task?