Saw Blade Burning
Tooth Count, Blade Material and Coating: Why the Wrong Blade Burns
How wrong tooth count, unsuitable blade material and incorrect coating cause saw blade burning during steel, stainless steel and tube cutting.
Secondary keywords: saw blade material overheating, HSS vs TCT vs cermet blade, metal cutting blade coating heat
Search intent: A buyer wants to know if the blade selection itself is creating heat.
Wrong blade selection creates heat in two opposite ways: chip packing from too many teeth or impact and vibration from too few teeth.
Blade material matters too. HSS, TCT and cermet blades each need the right machine speed, coolant and application.
A blade can burn even when RPM and feed look reasonable if tooth count, gullet size, blade material or coating does not match the metal being cut.
Tooth count and blade material table
| Blade choice issue | Burning mechanism | Better selection logic |
|---|---|---|
| Too many teeth for thick pipe | Chip packing and rubbing | Use lower tooth count or larger gullet geometry. |
| Too few teeth for thin-wall tube | Impact, vibration and tearing | Use finer pitch and stable tube-cutting blade. |
| HSS run at excessive speed | Loss of hardness and rapid dulling | Use correct RPM or suitable TCT/cermet setup. |
| Generic carbide blade on stainless | Rubbing, heat and work hardening | Use stainless-rated TCT/cermet geometry. |
| Aluminum blade used on steel | Wrong tooth geometry and unsafe heat | Use metal-rated steel cutting blade. |
Coating is useful but not magic
Coating can reduce friction, support chip flow and improve wear resistance. However, coating cannot overcome wrong surface speed, poor coolant, weak clamping or unsuitable tooth pitch.
Real industrial evidence
Cold Saw Shop separates blade guidance by low-carbon steel, medium-carbon steel, stainless/high-alloy metals and aluminum. Kinkelder’s tube cutting pages separate applications by material strength, stainless use and tube geometry. This public market structure shows why one blade cannot be professional for all metals.
Recommended blade direction
For low- and medium-carbon steel tube, use Ciswerk Cermet Cold Saw Blade or Ciswerk TCT Cold Saw Blade. For stainless tube and profiles, use Ciswerk TCT Cold Saw Blade with stainless-capable tooth geometry and coating. For conventional saws and regrinding service, use Ciswerk HSS Circular Saw Blade.
FAQ
Does a higher tooth count prevent burning?
Only when the application needs it. Too many teeth can cause chip packing and heat.
Can coating stop a blade from burning?
Coating helps friction and wear, but it cannot fix wrong RPM, feed, tooth pitch or coolant.
