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Forrest blades are great. The blade was rusty, covered with sandy gunk and some of the blade teeth were protruding through the wax covering. Have been using them for years and love them. This blade arrived on time but had been previously opened and the package closed again with tape. One of the teeth appeared damaged (the carbide tip). Sent this blade right back to Amazon and ordered one from Rockler.
My wife got me this for valentines day and it is by far the best valentines gift i have ever recieved. It is also the best table saw blade i have owned. I have had Ridgid, Freud, Bosch and it makes every cut better then the others even though the dedicated blades
I paid $80.20 for this blade one year ago. Love the blade but will be shopping elsewhere for a 2nd one.
Anyone considering this purchase, that enjoys making sawdust even a little, I would tell you to just do it. Turned around and ordered the Chopmaster for the new Milwaukee miter saw I just bought also.
I built a cabinet for my bathroom (out of cherry) and was consistently getting burns on the wood - and I knew I had to do something with the blade as everything else on the saw was dialed-in. I am getting ready to build new kitchen cabinets and I realized I needed to upgrade a few things in the shop first.
Ran some scrap cherry through and the cut WAS like it had already been finished - I wouldn't have had to do ANYTHING and what a huge time saving that will be. I had been using a freud and it did me fine for a number of years but I had read enough to know Forrest was the top end blade.
I bit the bullet and ordered the WWII and WOW. I hated spending all that money but each item was worth every penny (plus some).
You really won't regret it.
The time it saves is money in your pocket in a production environment.-- The company stands behind their products. Worth the price.THINGS TO CONSIDER:-- This blade has an alternating top bevel (ATB) tooth pattern. I know I more than once found that I'd forgotten to account for such a wide kerf in my material planning. It, like most blades, cuts much better when it's clean. -- Most professionals doing fine woodworking will recommend this blade both for the quality it provides AND the convenience of not having to switch blades. If you've got a larger cabinet saw, you're in the clear to use it. (Most rip blades have flat teeth, so buy a cheap ripper from the borg if you are looking to make those sort of kerf cuts).-- This blade is thick.
(With my 3hp Grizzly 1023, it's like butter). With a smaller saw (contractors or benchtop) you may not have enough power to push this thing through thick hardwood, so it's worthwhile to ask around and plan ahead.-- Plan for the kerf size when purchasing wood. THE LOWDOWN: Considered the best combo blade on the market. In thick hardwoods, it's possible to "blue" the blade if you build up too much friction (which could happen with any blade for a zillion reasons if you're not careful). It's not likely, but possible, and it will really make you angry to ruin such an expensive blade.-- Keep it clean. I recommend waxing the sides of it too.REPUTATION OF THE MAKER:-- The Forrest Woodworker II is the "gold standard" combination blade (combo=for both ripping and crosscutting) on the market for tablesaws. The best part. I've heard only good things about their sharpening service as well.
That means that the teeth stick up higher on the sides then in the middle -- which means it's NOT good for cutting spline slots or kerfs that you'll want to fit another piece of wood into (as in boxmaking). I had a warped blade which they replaced promptly. If you rip a board into four sections with this blade, you're going to lose 3/8ths to the kerf. So, if you're conservation minded when it comes to pricey wood, you might want to opt for a thinner kerf blade.-- Heed Forrest's instructions for using this blade. WAY after the warranty had expired. You can actually talk to a human, in America, on the phone.
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