| Brand Name: | XRTOOLS |
| Model Number: | 216mm |
| MOQ: | 200pcs |
| Price: | $0.5-22/pcs |
| Delivery Time: | 25-30days |
| Payment Terms: | L/C, D/P, T/T, Western Union, MoneyGram |
The Problem: When using high-torque slide miter saws to cut wide, expensive crown molding or double-sided melamine, standard blades tend to "grab" the material during the slide motion. This creates microscopic horizontal vibrations that shatter the brittle top layer of the wood veneer or laminate.
The Result: Jagged, visible edges that cannot be hidden by paint or caulking, leading to wasted expensive trim and poor client reviews on high-end cabinetry installs.
Inadequate Tooth Pitch: A general-purpose 40T blade on an 8.5" diameter has too much space between teeth. Each tooth hits the wood with excessive impact, causing a "chopping" effect rather than a slicing one.
Plate Harmonic Frequency: High-RPM motors can trigger a specific resonance in the steel plate of the saw blade, causing it to "ring" or wobble slightly mid-cut, which destroys the precision of the kerf.
High-Density 60T Micro-Shear: By optimizing the pitch to 60 teeth, we ensure constant engagement with the material. The Alternate Top Bevel (ATB) grind allows the teeth to act as alternating scalpels, shearing the wood fibers cleanly on both the left and right sides of the kerf simultaneously.
Laser-Cut Acoustic Dampening: The 216mm body is equipped with specialized laser-cut "J-slots" filled with vibration-dampening resin. These slots break up the harmonic frequency of the blade, ensuring it runs with whisper-quiet stability and a dead-flat trajectory throughout the cut.
Chrome-Cobalt Reinforced Carbide: Our Tungsten Carbide Tips (TCT) are enriched with a high-cobalt binder. This prevents "edge-rounding" when cutting abrasive materials like MDF or high-density laminates, keeping the blade factory-sharp for 4x longer than standard C3 carbide.
| Technical Pillar | Imperial Specification | Metric Specification | Industrial Benefit |
| Diameter | 8-1/2" | 216mm | Standard size for professional slide miter saws. |
| Arbor Size | 5/8" (Universal) | 15.88mm / 30mm Options | Compatible with both US and European spindles. |
| Tooth Count | 60T | 60T | The "Sweet Spot" for splinter-free finish work. |
| Tooth Grind | ATB | ATB | Slices fragile veneers without top-edge tear-out. |
| Plate Build | Resin-Filled Silencer Slots | Resin-Filled Silencer Slots | Eliminates vibration "whistle" and heat warping. |
| Max RPM | 7,000 RPM | 7,000 RPM | Optimized for high-speed industrial motor outputs. |
High-End Interior Trim: Flawless cross-cutting of large-profile crown molding, chair rails, and baseboards without requiring secondary sanding.
Cabinetry & Shelving: Precision sizing of double-sided melamine and veneered plywood panels where edge-banding must be applied directly to the cut.
Flooring Transitions: Delivering glass-smooth edges on engineered hardwood and LVP transition strips for a high-end architectural finish.
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Feed Direction Protocol: When using a slide miter saw, always pull the saw toward you, lower it, and then push it away from you through the material. This "climb-cutting" motion combined with the 60T ATB geometry ensures the cleanest possible entry and exit.
RPM Verification: Ensure your saw is rated for at least 5,000 RPM. Running a 60T blade at too low a speed can cause the material to "clog" the tiny gullets, leading to friction burning on the wood edge.
Q: Can I use this 8-1/2" 60T blade for ripping 2x4 framing lumber?
A: It is not recommended. Ripping structural lumber produces long, stringy chips that will quickly clog the small gullets of a 60-tooth blade. This leads to friction heat, scorched wood, and potential motor damage. For ripping, a 24T or 40T blade is the correct choice.
Q: Does this 216mm blade fit standard 10-inch table saws?
A: While it will fit a 5/8" arbor, it is not ideal. A smaller blade on a 10-inch saw creates a different cutting angle and has a lower peripheral speed. This blade is purpose-built to maximize the performance of dedicated 8-1/2" slide miter saws.
Q: Will the 60-tooth count make the blade dull faster?
A: Actually, because there are more teeth sharing the workload, each individual carbide tip takes a smaller "bite," which can lead to longer overall edge retention on delicate finish materials compared to using a 40T blade for the same task.
Q: Is the ATB grind suitable for cutting non-ferrous metals like aluminum?
A: No. The Alternate Top Bevel (ATB) is a "sharp" grind for wood fibers. Aluminum and other soft metals will instantly chip the fine points of the carbide. For aluminum, you must use a blade with a Triple Chip Grind (TCG) and a zero or negative rake angle.