Saw Blade Burning
Why Saw Blades Burn During Metal Cutting
Troubleshooting guide for saw blade burn marks, overheating saw blades and blue or black discoloration during metal cutting.
Secondary keywords: burn marks during cutting, overheating saw blade, metal cutting saw blade troubleshooting, cold saw blade burning
Search intent: A production user sees burn marks, heat marks or blue teeth and wants the root cause.
Burning is a high-value problem query because the customer already has downtime, scrap or short blade life.
In metal cutting, burning usually means blue or brown discoloration, overheated teeth, smoke, welded chips, damaged coating, rough surface finish or sudden loss of blade life.
Saw blades burn when heat is generated faster than chips, coolant and the blade body can remove it. The usual causes are excessive RPM, wrong feed, wrong tooth count, insufficient coolant, chip recutting or blade material mismatch.
Five main causes of burning
- • RPM too high: excessive surface speed creates heat before the tooth can form a stable chip.
- • Wrong feed: too slow causes rubbing; too aggressive overloads the tooth and creates heat through damage.
- • Wrong tooth count: too many teeth pack chips; too few teeth hammer the workpiece.
- • Insufficient coolant: weak flow, wrong nozzle direction or a worn chip brush allows friction to rise.
- • Blade material mismatch: HSS, TCT, cermet and abrasive wheels require different speed, feed and material matching.
Real industrial evidence
The Blade Mfg. Co. publishes different cutting-speed ranges by material and blade type, showing that RPM must be selected from blade diameter, material and blade design.
Scotchman’s cold saw blade basics paper treats pitch, speed, feed and coolant as a combined system. Dake’s troubleshooting guide links premature failure to incorrect speed/feed, insufficient cutting fluid, chip welding and improper blade selection.
Troubleshooting table
| Symptom | Likely cause | Corrective action |
|---|---|---|
| Blue teeth or blade rim | RPM too high, low feed or insufficient coolant | Reduce surface speed, verify feed per tooth and improve coolant delivery. |
| Smoke or strong heat smell | Friction, dry-cut mismatch or poor lubrication | Check blade rating, coolant/mist, chip brush and nozzle direction. |
| Workpiece burn marks | Rubbing, dull blade or wrong tooth count | Inspect tooth wear, adjust feed and reselect pitch. |
| Hot chips welding to teeth | Chip packing, coolant failure or wrong geometry | Use correct gullet capacity and restore chip removal. |
Recommended blade direction
For carbon steel tube and profile, start with Ciswerk Cermet Cold Saw Blade or Ciswerk TCT Cold Saw Blade after confirming RPM, feed and coolant. For stainless steel, use Ciswerk TCT Cold Saw Blade with stainless-capable geometry and coating. For conventional cold saws, use Ciswerk HSS Circular Saw Blade within the correct speed range.
FAQ
Why does my saw blade turn blue when cutting metal?
Blue discoloration indicates excessive heat. Check RPM, feed, coolant, tooth count, chip removal and blade material.
Is burning always caused by high RPM?
No. Too-slow feed, dull teeth, chip packing, insufficient coolant and wrong blade material can also burn a blade.
