Cochese said:For this particular project it is Western Red Cedar, 1.5" thick.
One of the issues I have with my table saw isn't so much cut quality from blades, it is kerf marks and the end of the stock moving away from the fence.
For the TS55, I have only ever used the stock blade, and only for plywood.
Pareto said:Sorry to hijack this thread, I've also been looking at getting a Panther blade for my TS55 to rip some 2" Elm. I've only used the standard/Universal/whatever-was-fitted-when-it-left-the-factory blade - am I right to believe that the 2.2mm kerf on the all the 160mm blades means that all will be fine with my cutting guides when changing between blades?
Cheers.
Cochese said:I need some better quality rip cuts than my table saw can provide (for whatever reason), so I need a rip blade. I need a recommendation for this, to stick with the Festool blades (which have mixed opinions on) or go with a third party. I'd like to keep the 2.2mm kerf if at all possible, and I need something I can get relatively quickly - I'm not sure the Tenyru is an option.
jswalcott said:I've been so happy with my TS55 cut quality, haven't paid attention to blades and didn't even realize the standard/fine blade had been discontinued. I cut mostly plywood - if I find myself in need of a blade replacement, is the mixed quality opinion on the Universal blade mostly tied to solid stock as discussed here? And Seth, are you mostly cutting solid stock as well? Curios as to the cleanup you refer to on cut stock, I get that on solid stock but not sure how/if that applies to sheet material (if that makes sense).
Cochese said:Went with the 28T, as the 2.2mm rip blade wasn't in stock at Woodcraft anyway. They had the old one, though.
jswalcott said:I've been so happy with my TS55 cut quality, haven't paid attention to blades and didn't even realize the standard/fine blade had been discontinued. I cut mostly plywood - if I find myself in need of a blade replacement, is the mixed quality opinion on the Universal blade mostly tied to solid stock as discussed here? And Seth, are you mostly cutting solid stock as well? Curios as to the cleanup you refer to on cut stock, I get that on solid stock but not sure how/if that applies to sheet material (if that makes sense).