Troubleshooting
Stainless Steel Cutting Problems: Burrs, Heat, Tooth Chipping and How the Right TCT Blade Helps
Troubleshoot stainless steel cutting blade problems such as burrs, heat marks, tooth chipping, work hardening and short blade life.
Secondary keywords: best blade for stainless steel, TCT blade for inox, stainless steel cutting problems, burr-free stainless cutting
Search intent: A production user has poor cuts and wants troubleshooting guidance.
Burrs, heat marks, noise and tooth chipping are common when stainless steel cutting is treated like ordinary mild steel cutting. Stainless needs controlled chip formation and stable workholding.
A TCT blade for inox can help only when the blade is matched to the saw and the failure mode is understood.
Do not blame the blade first and do not blame the machine first. Stainless steel cutting problems usually come from a system: blade geometry, coating, RPM, feed, coolant or dry-cut method, clamping, chip removal and material section.
Problem 1: heavy burr on stainless tube
Burr is one of the most common complaints in stainless steel tube cutting. A small exit burr may be normal, but heavy burr indicates the blade is tearing or pushing material instead of shearing cleanly.
- • Use a stainless-rated TCT blade for inox rather than a general steel or aluminum blade.
- • Increase tooth count for thin-wall tube if the current blade has too few teeth in the cut.
- • Check clamping: tube must not rotate, lift or vibrate during exit.
- • Check whether the blade has runout, missing tips or chip-loaded gullets.
- • For production cutting, use the recommended chip brush and lubrication or coolant system.
Problem 2: blue or brown heat marks
Heat marks indicate that the cut zone is too hot. Stainless steel has low thermal conductivity, so heat stays near the cutting edge and workpiece surface. Heat can come from rubbing, inadequate feed, insufficient coolant, wrong coating, a dull blade, chip packing or a saw running outside the proper speed range.
Problem 3: tooth chipping
Tooth chipping is often caused by impact. Stainless tube, interrupted cuts, bundle cutting, poor clamping, aggressive feed at entry, incorrect tooth count and chip recutting can all chip carbide tips.
| Symptom | Likely cause | Corrective action |
|---|---|---|
| Exit burr | Too few teeth, vibration, dull edge or poor support | Use higher tooth count for tube, improve clamping and check blade condition. |
| Heat marks | Rubbing, dull blade, wrong feed, poor cooling or chip packing | Adjust feed, use correct coolant or dry blade, clean chips and verify RPM. |
| Tooth chipping | Impact, interrupted cut, loose workpiece or recut chips | Improve clamping, reduce entry shock, use chip brush and correct blade geometry. |
| Short blade life | Wrong application match or poor process control | Record material, section, RPM, feed, cuts per blade and failure mode. |
| Noisy cut | Runout, vibration, incorrect tooth count or unstable blade body | Check machine spindle, blade flatness, clamping and blade design. |
Problem 4: stainless work hardening
When stainless steel is rubbed instead of cut, the surface can work-harden. After that, the next tooth meets a harder surface, cutting forces rise and blade wear accelerates. This is why stainless cutting often needs a decisive, stable chip load rather than a timid feed.
How to collect a useful cutting problem case
- Photograph the cut face and burr.
- Photograph three to five teeth under good light.
- Record how many cuts were made before the problem appeared.
- Check if the problem happens at entry, during cutting or at exit.
- Change only one variable at a time during testing.
FAQ
Why does a stainless steel cutting blade leave burrs?
Common causes include too few teeth in the cut, dull teeth, vibration, poor clamping, wrong feed and a blade not rated for stainless steel.
Does slower feed always protect the blade?
No. Too slow can cause rubbing, heat and work hardening. The correct feed must create a stable chip without overloading the tooth.
