Freud Glue Line Blades - Printable Version +- Woodnet Forums (https://www.forums.woodnet.net) +-- Thread: Freud Glue Line Blades (/showthread.php?tid=7359842) Pages:
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Freud Glue Line Blades - lincmercguy - 01-01-2021 How do you guys like the Freud 30T glue line blades? I'm looking for a dedicated hardwood rip blade for my Jet JPS-10 wired for 220V. It has to be full kerf since the saw has a riving knife. I already have a combo blade for crosscuts and plywood. I have a CMT 24T blade that I can use for really thick cuts. My goal is a really smooth cut so I can cut back the amount of sanding after ripping. RE: Freud Glue Line Blades - R Clark - 01-01-2021 I have one, and it's done well. Assuming that the saw is properly tuned/aligned, I think burning is more a function of blade sharpness and perhaps residue buildup. Regarding full-kerf blades: I've been a "think-kerf" guy for many years and most of my current blades are Freud think-kerf combo blades. However, I think I've bought my last thin-kerf blade. Future replacements will be full-kerf, likely Freud. RE: Freud Glue Line Blades - sweensdv2 - 01-01-2021 I have one and if used as directed it has done a good job for me. You should be aware of the material thickness that this blade is rated for. RE: Freud Glue Line Blades - lincmercguy - 01-01-2021 "Assuming that the saw is properly tuned/aligned, I think burning is more a function of blade sharpness and perhaps residue buildup. Regarding full-kerf blades: I've been a "think-kerf" guy for many years and most of my current blades are Freud think-kerf combo blades. However, I think I've bought my last thin-kerf blade. Future replacements will be full-kerf, likely Freud." I've not been getting much burning (I do if I use a combo blade), I just notice blade marks on the cut that I need to sand out. I would be happy if they are reduced. When I first bought this saw, I had a good thin kerf combo blade from my old saw and tried to find a thinner riving knife. I gave up and bought a standard blade and sold the thin kerf blade. RE: Freud Glue Line Blades - lincmercguy - 01-01-2021 "I have one and if used as directed it has done a good job for me. You should be aware of the material thickness that this blade is rated for." I saw that it says up to 1". I'll keep my CMT blade for the rare thicker stuff or run multiple passes. Most of what I do is 1/2" - 1". RE: Freud Glue Line Blades - Cabinet Monkey - 01-02-2021 Quote:I've been a "think-kerf" guy for many years and most of my current blades are Freud think-kerf combo blades. However, I think I've bought my last thin-kerf blade. care to share why you've come to this conclusion ? RE: Freud Glue Line Blades - R Clark - 01-03-2021 (01-02-2021, 11:07 PM)Cabinet Monkey Wrote: care to share why you've come to this conclusion ? - Riving knife on my saw tends to have a small "hang" when the leading edge of the workpiece contacts it when using a thin-kerf blade. - Less chance of blade deflection on long rip cuts or when making for tablesaw cove cuts. - Better heat dissipation on long rip cuts with full-kerf blades. - Don't have to account for blade thickness against fence settings if I'm swapping back and forth between thin-kerf and full-kerf blades. I originally went thin-kerf since I was using a 1.5HP contractor's saw on the single 110V 15A circuit that used to power my garage-based shop. Reducing the kerf resistance was an important factor to me then. I have a 3HP saw now and plenty of power in the shop. RE: Freud Glue Line Blades - cputnam - 01-04-2021 I had a 30T that produced beautiful edges that were probably glue ready but I always ran a plane over them so I quit using the blade. Wasn't worth the blade changing hassle. RE: Freud Glue Line Blades - packerguy® - 01-04-2021 (01-01-2021, 02:52 AM)lincmercguy Wrote: How do you guys like the Freud 30T glue line blades? I'm looking for a dedicated hardwood rip blade for my Jet JPS-10 wired for 220V. It has to be full kerf since the saw has a riving knife. I have 5. Fantastic rip blade. RE: Freud Glue Line Blades - rschissler - 01-05-2021 My go to blade is a Freud P410 Fusion, 40 teeth. How can a 30 tooth blade be considered glue line or glue ready? A higher tooth blade should give a smoother finish, right, and I would think that a 60-80 tooth blade would give the smoothest finish? Or is the thinking that a 24 tooth blade is standard, so a 30 tooth makes it glue ready? |