Cabinet and Millwork Installation

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Good blade for a slider

11/4/13       
Chris

Leitz is what I'm thinking. I need an atb and a triple chip. I just got a brand new scmi slider and there are no pin holes...there is a 1" bore on a saw that takes up to a 450mm blade (go figure imperial/metric)
The blade that came with the saw is a no name Aussie blade...350mm with a 1" bore. I have no speed control on the saw and am wondering if it matters if I can just get a 12" with a 1" bore.

11/6/13       #2: Good blade for a slider ...
Slider Help

Connecticut Saw & Tool can help you with many great blades for that slider - huge carbide C4 tips, very thick shanks and lasts forever. House brands for the most part - but very heavy duty made for most panel saws. I can't say enough for their stuff!

I've also used the Amana Ditec 2000 Series (from toolstoday.com) with good results - they only go up to 14" but no problem with mostly sheet goods. See the attached link.

Truthfully - on my SCMI I rarely change the speed between 14" & 12" blades with no issues. Only when I go up to the 16" blades will I slow it down. Most of my blades are all okay up to 8,600, and my saw only revs to 6,000 for top speed.

Side note - I thought all the SCMI's (16") had at least 3 speed changes (via pulley belt changes). What model did you buy? Is it brand new or just "new" for you?

Ditec 2000 Slider Blades

11/6/13       #3: Good blade for a slider ...
chris

Thanks. I bought a brand new Nova si 400.
Maybe I can change speeds via belts? Didn't read the manual (of course). I've used saws in the past that have buttons for speed change. No buttons on this saw so I assumed...

11/7/13       #4: Good blade for a slider ...
Slider Help

Just take a quick gander underneath - if there's a multi-groove pulley between our motor and the blade spindle - you are golden! If not, sigh.... :-)

4/6/14       #5: Good blade for a slider ...
Harold

Website: http://morantzcabinets.com

I have been using sliders for 34 years. Many different brands and I have had and still have Casolin . I have always used triple chip with a scoring blade in 10" diameter. Have tried whichever brand my sharpening company carried and a Gudho came with the saw. We cut melamine, MDF with and without veneers and some bamboo panels and prefinished maple . Never understood the hype on different brand blades. They all seem to do the se job. 10" seems to be plenty for 3/4"thick panels and even 1" melamine board. Am I missing something? Harold.

4/7/14       #6: Good blade for a slider ...
Chris

No you're not missing anything Harold, I just got my first (my own) slider and thought it could be different than a reg. cab saw. As I haven't really paid attention to blade names, rakes, pitches etc. while cutting on other peoples saws. Got a leitz saw blade steep angled atb. Seems just as good as the Aussie made triple chip that came with the saw. I agree names names names.


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