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The more teeth, the cleaner
the cut, which is why most
crosscutting blades have 60 to 100
ATB teeth. A blade like this excels
at getting the cleanest crosscuts
and miters.
You can also use a 40-tooth
ATB or 50-tooth combination blade
for crosscutting. It might not slice
quite as cleanly as an 80- or 100-
tooth blade, but almost (photo d).
And it saves you the trouble of
constantly switching from a rip
blade to a crosscut blade.
Truth is,
I do most of my crosscutting on
the table saw with a 40-tooth ATB
blade. I use my 80-tooth ATB blade
only when I need to do concerted
crosscutting, mitering, or sawing of
delicate sheet goods.
blades for sheet goods
Sheet goods include plywood,
particleboard, melamine, MDF,
hardboard, and plastic laminate.
Here, the best blade for the job
depends on the material.
Because of its thin veneers,
plywood is prone to tear-out,
particularly when sawing across
face veneer. It is best cut with an ATB blade, and ATB blade, and the more teeth the
Blades for sheet goods
Sheet goods include plywood,
particleboard, melamine, MDF,
hardboard, and plastic laminate.
Here, the best blade for the job
depends on the material.
Because of its thin veneers,
plywood is prone to tear-out,
particularly when sawing across
face veneer. It is best cut
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with an ATB blade. However, a good
quality all-
purpose blade will do fi ne in most
cases. I switch over to an 80-tooth
blade when cutting particularly
delicate face veneers.
Particleboard, melamine, MDF,
and hardboard are all fairly dense
materials that can be hard on saw
teeth. Cutting this stuff with an ATB
blade will wear down its pointy tips
quicker than most solid wood will.
However, the shearing action of
ATB teeth provides clean cuts in
these chip-prone materials, so it’s
a fair trade-off.
Plastic laminate is very dense
and tough on the tips of ATB teeth.
If you work with it a lot, it’s worth
investing in a TCG blade for the
purpose. Otherwise, your ATB
blades may take sooner-than-
desired trips to the sharpeners. |
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