Would this blade be beneficial to a portable table saw (a Ridgid TS2400LS 10" portable saw specifically), or is this something that you need a cabinet/contractor saw to see the benefit from?
Would this blade be beneficial to a portable table saw (a Ridgid TS2400LS 10" portable saw specifically), or is this something that you need a cabinet/contractor saw to see the benefit from?
Pete
Buckeye95
Pete,
it would be excellent for use in your saw. it has thin kerf which helps the lower hp motor cut, and lower tooth count helps as well. and it's a forrest, maker of high quality blades.
btw- i went to school at lincoln elementary in columbus in the '60s, do you know if it still exists?
Amazon must be doing the refunds automatically! I hadn't looked at my email until this evening, but at 12:39, they sent me a note saying it had dropped and they were processing a refund for the difference. If you look at the time of my post above, that was 2 hours before I started the process of asking for the refund! Looks like the Zon is on the ball!! Jim.
That is one Amazing price for a 10" WWII....$50 to your door! ....it's not hard to spend that for a lesser blade anywhere that sells blades. The 9" is down to $43.22, which should still provide ~ 3" cutting height from a 10" saw. Any fence sitters still hanging around?
Happiness is sort of like wetting your pants....everyone can see it, but only you can feel the warmth.
Forrest WWII 30tooth 9" is down to $41. Had to pull the trigger for that price. A 9" blade is fine since I rarely cut stock greater than 3" thick (plus it should be a little lighter than a 10" for anyone with a saw < 3hp.
i cut some mesquite and lacewood on my 3hp jet cabinet saw and man it feels like it gained a couple of horses. it rips as well as my 24 tooth ripper and crosscuts almost as well as my 40 tooth combo. thanks for the heads up guys!
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