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Category: Blade Selection
Guides focused on choosing the correct bandsaw blade, including TPI selection, blade types, and material considerations.
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Portable Sawmill Bandsaw Blades – Choosing the Right Blade for Milling Logs
Portable sawmill bandsaw blades operate under very different conditions to standard wood cutting.When milling logs, blade type, tooth material, and setup all directly affect cutting speed, finish, and blade life. Choosing the right blade is not about what is “best” overall — it is about what performs best for your timber, your machine, and how…
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What Bandsaw Blade Should I Use for Cutting Wood?
The best bandsaw blade for wood depends on what you are cutting and how you are cutting it. There is no single “best” blade — but there is a correct type for each job. The Three Things That Matter Choosing the right blade comes down to three factors: Get these right, and most cutting problems…
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Why Bandsaw Cuts Are Rough or Splintering in Wood
A bandsaw should leave a reasonably clean cut.If the surface is rough, torn, or splintered, something isn’t matched correctly. In most cases, it comes down to blade choice and cutting consistency. What a Rough Cut Looks Like Common signs: 👉 In simple terms:The blade is not cutting cleanly through the wood fibres. Why It Happens…
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Why Wood Burns When Cutting with a Bandsaw
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: 👉 In simple terms:Too much friction, not enough cutting. Why It Happens Burning is caused by heat build-up — usually from…
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Why Bandsaw Blades Wander When Cutting Wood
If your cut won’t follow the line, the blade isn’t tracking straight through the wood.This is usually called wandering or drift — and it’s one of the most common bandsaw problems. It’s not random. There’s always a reason. What “Wandering” Means A wandering blade does not cut where you guide it. Typical signs: 👉 In…
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Why Bandsaw Blades Fail (Complete Guide + Troubleshooting)
Intro Bandsaw blades don’t fail randomly. If your bandsaw blade has snapped, it’s almost always due to fatigue, incorrect tension, or a setup issue — not random failure. They fail due to incorrect setup, wrong blade selection, or poor operating practices — most commonly incorrect tension, incorrect TPI, and improper feed rates. In almost every…


