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Saw Blade Tooth Guide

Testere Bıçağı Diş Rehberi

Malzemeniz ve kesim türünüz için doğru bıçak diş sayısını ve geometrisini seçin.

Diş sayısı80T
Bıçak türüATB fine-finish
Kanca açısı5-10° positive
Masa testere RPM3,500 - 4,200 RPM
Güvenlik: Keskin bıçak gereklidir; yanık izleri kör diş anlamına gelir. Her zaman göz koruması kullanın ve koruyucuları takılı tutun. Kesime girmeden önce bıçağın tam hıza ulaşmasını bekleyin.
Genel kural: daha fazla diş = daha pürüzsüz kesim ancak daha yavaş ilerleme + daha fazla ısı. Daha az diş = talaş temizlemek için daha büyük oluklarla daha hızlı boyuna kesim.

The right saw blade dramatically affects cut quality, blade life, motor strain, and safety. The four key blade specifications: tooth count (more teeth = smoother cut + slower feed; fewer teeth = faster, rougher cut), tooth geometry (ATB = Alternate Top Bevel for crosscutting wood; FTG = Flat Top Grind for ripping; TCG = Triple Chip Grind for laminates and aluminum; ATBR = Alternate Top Bevel with Raker for combo rip/crosscut), kerf width (thin-kerf 0.075-0.090" cuts faster with less motor strain; full-kerf 0.125" is stiffer for cleaner cuts but slower), and arbor size (5/8" standard for table saws; check your saw). Wrong blade choice tears wood, burns finish, kicks back dangerously, or destroys the blade and motor.

Standard recommendations by material and cut: ripping solid wood (cutting along the grain) — 24T flat-top-grind rip blade. Crosscutting solid wood — 60-80T ATB. Plywood / melamine / veneers — 80-100T high-angle ATB (HiATB) for clean edges without tearout. Aluminum / non-ferrous metals — TCG blade with negative hook angle, designed for non-ferrous (DON'T use wood blades on metal — dangerous, ruins blade). Laminate flooring — TCG, 80T. Combo blade (general purpose) — 40-50T ATBR; compromise blade that does both rip and crosscut adequately but neither excellently. Dado blades (for grooves) — stacked dado set, 6-8 inch diameter, varies.

Safety considerations the guide surfaces: (1) Match blade RPM rating to your saw — a blade rated 7,000 RPM on a saw spinning 8,500 will fly apart catastrophically. (2) Inspect blades before use — cracked teeth or warped plates are immediate scrap. (3) Hook angle matters — positive hook angle (15-20°) for fast cuts in soft wood; negative hook (-5° to 0°) for non-ferrous and laminate (prevents grabbing). (4) Sharpening — quality blades can be professionally resharpened 3-10 times, extending life dramatically. Cheap blades (under $30) usually aren't worth resharpening. (5) Never force a dull blade — burning, smoking, kickback all signal dull blade or wrong blade for the job.

Nasıl Kullanılır

  1. Pick the material you're cutting (solid wood, plywood, MDF, aluminum, laminate, etc.).
  2. Pick cut type: ripping (along grain), crosscutting (across grain), or combo.
  3. Read recommended tooth count, geometry (ATB/FTG/TCG), and hook angle.
  4. Check arbor size and RPM rating against your saw.
  5. Match thin-kerf vs full-kerf to motor power (thin-kerf for under-15 amp saws).

Ne Zaman Kullanılır

  • Buying a new blade for a specific project — confirm match to material and cut.
  • Diagnosing poor cut quality — wrong blade is the most common cause of tearout, burn marks, and rough edges.
  • Setting up a new table saw or miter saw — picking the starter blade.
  • Comparing blade options at the hardware store.
  • Onboarding a new shop helper — quick reference for what blade to use when.

Ne Zaman Kullanılmaz

  • Hand saws and pull saws — those have different tooth conventions (TPI = teeth per inch, different geometry).
  • Bandsaws — those use different blade specifications entirely (TPI, kerf, set).
  • Specialty cuts (laser-cut, water-jet, plasma) — different mechanics and blade categories don't apply.
  • Reciprocating saws (Sawzall, jigsaw) — those have their own blade conventions per material.

Yaygın Kullanım Senaryoları

  • Quick use during a typical workday
  • Pre-decision sanity-check on inputs and outputs
  • Educational use — demonstrating the underlying concept
  • Onboarding a colleague who needs the same calculation/conversion

Sık Sorulan Sorular

Why does my plywood tear out?

Three causes: (1) Wrong blade — you need 80-100T high-angle ATB for plywood, not a 40T combo blade. (2) Dull blade — blades that worked on solid wood may produce tearout on plywood much earlier. (3) Cutting direction — finished face down on table saw, finished face up on miter saw (reduces tearout on the visible side). For zero-tearout cuts on premium plywood (cabinet doors, finish work), score the cut line with a knife first or use a zero-clearance throat plate.

Can I use a wood blade on aluminum?

No — dangerous and ineffective. Wood blades have positive hook angles (15-20°) that “grab” aluminum, causing kickback. Aluminum needs negative hook angle (-5° to 0°) and TCG geometry. Use a dedicated non-ferrous metal blade. Lubricate the cut with cutting wax or WD-40 to prevent the blade from gumming. NEVER cut steel with any saw blade designed for wood or aluminum — fire and fragmentation risk.

What's a thin-kerf blade?

Thin-kerf blades have a narrower cut path (typically 0.090" vs 0.125" full-kerf). Cuts faster with less motor strain — recommended for under-15 amp table saws. Tradeoff: thinner blade plate is more prone to flexing, which can produce slightly rougher cuts. For low-power saws and standard cuts, thin-kerf is the right default. For premium furniture-grade cuts on a 3+ HP cabinet saw, full-kerf gives stiffer and cleaner results.

How long should a blade last?

Quality 10-inch blades typically last 200-500 cuts in hardwood before needing sharpening. Cheap blades may dull in 50-100 cuts. Sharpening costs $15-30 per blade, can be done 3-10 times before the blade is worn out. Signs of dullness: burning marks on cuts, increased feed pressure required, rough or chipped cut quality, motor slowdown during cut, smoke. A genuinely sharp blade cuts effortlessly with no smoke or marks.

Should I buy expensive blades?

Yes for primary blades. Forrest, Freud Diablo Industrial, CMT, Amana — quality blades ($50-150 range) cut better, last longer, and resharpen well. Cheap blades ($15-30) work for occasional rough cuts but produce burn marks, tear out plywood, and dull fast. For a hobbyist table saw, one quality 40T combo blade plus one 80T ATB crosscut blade covers 90% of work and costs less long-term than rebuying cheap blades.

What's RPM matching?

Saw blades have a maximum safe RPM rating printed on them. If your saw spins faster than the blade's rating, the blade can fail catastrophically — fragmented carbide teeth at 100+ mph. Standard table saws run 4,000-5,500 RPM; miter saws 4,000 RPM; circular saws 5,000-6,000 RPM. Most quality blades are rated 7,000-9,000 RPM, well above any saw. But always check before using a blade you're unsure about, especially used or repurposed blades.