Haynie
Member
I needed to build a shipping crate for a bunch or boat propellers. Bought the plywood for the walls and fence slats for the supports. Got back to the shop set up the saw horses grabbed the shop circular saw. Checked the blade as all safety minded folks should do. Damn, one of my mechanics left the metal cutting blade in it. I searched for over an hour for the plywood blade. No where to be seen. I had to get this done and did not want go back to the hardware store and pay too much for a blade so I decided to use the metal cutting blade.
Holy cow folks. This may not be new to you but was an amazing experience for me. It cut the plywood like butter with zero tear out. Not a single splinter hanging off the edge. In fact it looked like I ran a piece of sand paper over the edge. I cut the cedar slats and they too looked sanded. Damned amazing. I will no longer use a blade made for wood. All of my circular saw blades are being replaced with this blade. They are not cheap but wow!
This is the blade:
Tenryu Steel-pro
Holy cow folks. This may not be new to you but was an amazing experience for me. It cut the plywood like butter with zero tear out. Not a single splinter hanging off the edge. In fact it looked like I ran a piece of sand paper over the edge. I cut the cedar slats and they too looked sanded. Damned amazing. I will no longer use a blade made for wood. All of my circular saw blades are being replaced with this blade. They are not cheap but wow!
This is the blade:
Tenryu Steel-pro