01-03-2020, 10:35 AM
At the risk of opening a whole can of worms I'll add my two cents on the Woodslicer. It cuts great - until it doesn't, and that happened in less than 25 feet of 10" maple on my 14" Delta with riser. What the …. Never have I seen a blade dull so quickly. I put an Olson MVP on and finished cutting the maple with no issues.
The comment about a 3/8" blade cutting better than a 1/2" one could be very true, especially if the saw has a wimpy spring as many 14" Deltas and clones do. I have an Iturra spring on mine and that still only gives you about 12K psi on a 1/2" blade, but that cuts better for me than a 3/8" one in thick stock. (The spring is capable of maybe 15K psi but the frame will bend so much that the upper guides go out of alignment.) On 6" stock, however, like the OP is asking about, a 3/8" x 4 tpi blade may be a very good choice if the spring in his saw can't put much tension on a 1/2" blade. It's not that a 3/8" blade has less resistance than a 1/2" it's because the spring will be able to apply 1/3 more tension to it. FWIW, I have a 3/8" x 4 typi blade on my saw most of the time and it works fine for resawing stock up to 6" thick.
Carbide blades like the Resaw King are amazing in how fast and smoothly they cut. I would use one for cutting exotics, otherwise, it seems awfully expensive for resawing 6" stock.
John
The comment about a 3/8" blade cutting better than a 1/2" one could be very true, especially if the saw has a wimpy spring as many 14" Deltas and clones do. I have an Iturra spring on mine and that still only gives you about 12K psi on a 1/2" blade, but that cuts better for me than a 3/8" one in thick stock. (The spring is capable of maybe 15K psi but the frame will bend so much that the upper guides go out of alignment.) On 6" stock, however, like the OP is asking about, a 3/8" x 4 tpi blade may be a very good choice if the spring in his saw can't put much tension on a 1/2" blade. It's not that a 3/8" blade has less resistance than a 1/2" it's because the spring will be able to apply 1/3 more tension to it. FWIW, I have a 3/8" x 4 typi blade on my saw most of the time and it works fine for resawing stock up to 6" thick.
Carbide blades like the Resaw King are amazing in how fast and smoothly they cut. I would use one for cutting exotics, otherwise, it seems awfully expensive for resawing 6" stock.
John