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Why Wood Burns When Cutting with a Bandsaw

Burn marks on wood caused by a bandsaw blade

Burn marks on wood are not normal.
They’re a sign the blade is generating heat instead of cutting cleanly.

In most cases, the blade is rubbing, not cutting.


What Burning Means

Burning shows up as:

  • Dark scorch marks on the cut edge
  • Smell of burnt wood
  • Slower cutting speed

👉 In simple terms:
Too much friction, not enough cutting.


Why It Happens

Burning is caused by heat build-up — usually from poor cutting conditions.
👉 if your bandsaw is struggling to cut cleanly

Feeding too slow

This is the most common cause.

  • Blade stays in contact too long
  • Teeth rub instead of cutting

👉 Light feed pressure creates heat.

Cutting curves too tight for the blade width

When cutting curves, the blade needs to turn within its radius.

  • A wide blade cannot turn tightly
  • Forcing it around a tight curve increases friction
  • The blade rubs sideways instead of cutting

👉 This quickly generates heat and causes burn marks on the wood.

Fix:

  • Use a narrower blade for tighter curves
  • Don’t force the blade around the turn

Dull blade

A dull blade can’t cut efficiently.

  • Increases friction
  • Generates heat quickly

👉 If it’s burning, check sharpness first.


Tooth pitch too fine (high TPI)

Fine teeth remove less material per pass.

  • Chips don’t clear well
  • More surface contact = more heat

👉 Common mistake on thicker timber.
👉how to choose the correct TPI.


Blade Factors

Tooth sharpness

Sharp teeth cut cleanly and carry heat away in the chip.

  • Dull teeth trap heat in the wood

Tooth pitch (TPI)

  • Coarser pitch = cooler cutting
  • Finer pitch = more heat risk

👉 Match the TPI to the material thickness, how to choose the correct TPI.


Cutting Technique Matters

Maintain steady feed pressure

  • Don’t creep through the cut
  • Let the blade work

Avoid stopping mid-cut

  • Holding position builds heat fast
  • Restarting can leave burn marks

Let the blade cut

  • Don’t force it
  • Don’t hesitate

👉 Consistent feed = clean cut


In Simple Terms

Wood burns when the blade rubs instead of cutting.

That usually comes down to:

  • Feeding too slowly
  • Dull blade
  • TPI too fine

Fix those, and burning usually disappears.
Bandsaw blades for cutting wood


👉how to order a bandsaw blade


About the Author

Allan Breckell

Managing Director
United Products / NZ Bandsaw

Author of United Products’ technical guides and blade calculators

Allan writes the technical guides published on this website and works directly with customers throughout New Zealand, helping them select, troubleshoot and optimise industrial bandsaw blade applications.

© United Products NZ – unitedproducts.co.nz