| Brand Name: | XRTOOLS |
| Model Number: | 305mm |
| MOQ: | 200pcs |
| Price: | $0.5-22/pcs |
| Delivery Time: | 25-30days |
| Payment Terms: | L/C, D/P, T/T, Western Union, MoneyGram |
The Problem: High-end modern cabinetry relies heavily on double-sided melamine, high-gloss acrylic panels, and paper-thin exotic wood veneers. When cutting these brittle materials on a 12-inch sliding miter saw or cabinet table saw, even a high-quality 80T blade can leave microscopic chips ("fuzz") along the top edge.
The Result: These micro-chips make it impossible to apply edge-banding directly after the cut. Cabinet makers are forced to waste hours routing or sanding the cut edge perfectly smooth before banding, destroying workshop efficiency and risking damage to expensive panels.
Impact Shock: On extremely brittle laminates, if the distance between the carbide teeth is too large, the blade essentially "slaps" the material before cutting it, fracturing the fragile top layer.
Thermal Edge Distortion: Cutting high-gloss acrylics or laminates at high speeds generates friction. If the blade isn't perfectly tensioned, the localized heat causes microscopic blade flutter, ruining the glassy edge.
Extreme-Density 100T Micro-Shear: Packing 100 Tungsten Carbide Teeth onto a 12-inch circumference creates the tightest possible tooth pitch for this diameter. Each tooth engages the material milliseconds apart, taking dust-sized shavings. This eliminates impact shock, allowing the Alternate Top Bevel (ATB) geometry to slice fragile veneers with surgical precision, leaving an edge that is 100% ready for immediate edge-banding.
Heat-Sink Laser J-Slots: 100 teeth generate immense friction. To counteract this, the blade features deep, laser-cut "J-slots" embedded with thermal-dampening resin. These act as expansion joints and heat sinks, drawing temperature away from the carbide tips and keeping the heavy-gauge steel core completely flat and wobble-free.
C4 Micro-Grain Carbide: Formulated with a highly dense, ultra-fine C4 micro-grain carbide that holds a razor-sharp edge significantly longer than standard carbides, preventing the "rounding" that typically causes tear-out on abrasive MDF and melamine cores.
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| Technical Pillar | Imperial Specification | Metric Specification | Industrial Benefit |
| Diameter | 12" | 305mm | Maximum capacity for commercial slide miter & table saws. |
| Arbor Size | 1" (Standard US) | 25.4mm / 30mm Options | Ensures absolute zero-play lock on industrial spindles. |
| Tooth Count | 100T | 100T | Extreme density for zero-chip cuts on brittle materials. |
| Tooth Grind | ATB | ATB | Slices fragile laminates flawlessly on both sides. |
| Plate Build | Thermal-Dampened Core | Thermal-Dampened Core | Absorbs 100-tooth friction heat to prevent plate warping. |
| Max RPM | 6,000 RPM | 6,000 RPM | Engineered to handle the torque of 15-Amp cabinet saws. |
High-Gloss Custom Cabinetry: The absolute standard for sizing double-sided melamine, high-gloss acrylic panels, and delicate veneers with edges that are instantly ready for edge-banding.
Picture Framing & Fine Joinery: Executing mathematically perfect, splinter-free miter joints on fragile, pre-finished picture frame moldings and delicate architectural trim.
Plywood Furniture Building: Cross-cutting expensive cabinet-grade hardwood plywood (Oak, Walnut, Birch) without leaving a single raised fiber on the exit cut.
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Ultra-Slow Feed Rate Protocol: A 100-tooth blade has practically no gullet space. It cannot clear large sawdust chips. You MUST feed the material or the saw extremely slowly. Forcing the blade will instantly scorch the wood, burn the laminate, and destroy the temper of the blade plate.
Blade Height Optimization (Table Saws): To achieve the ultimate glass-smooth edge on double-sided melamine, set the blade height extremely low—so only half of one carbide tooth clears the top of the material.
Q: Should I buy the 12" 80T or the 12" 100T for my miter saw?
A: If you are cutting thick hardwood crown molding (like solid oak or maple), buy the 80T. The 100T will generate too much friction and burn thick hardwoods. However, if you are cutting thin, fragile materials like pre-finished trim, picture frames, or double-sided melamine, the 100T is the mandatory choice for a flawless finish.
Q: Can I use this 100T blade to rip plywood on my table saw?
A: Absolutely not. Ripping (cutting parallel to the wood grain) requires deep gullets to evacuate chips. A 100T blade has microscopic gullets. If you try to rip with this blade, the sawdust will become trapped, causing severe friction, burning the wood, and risking violent table saw kickback. Use a 40T or 50T combination blade for ripping plywood.
Q: Why is my 100T blade leaving dark burn marks on my crosscuts?
A: Burn marks with a high-tooth-count blade indicate one of three things: 1) You are pushing the saw too fast, trapping the sawdust. 2) The wood you are cutting is too thick for a 100T blade to clear the dust effectively. 3) The blade has accumulated sticky wood pitch (sap) on the teeth, which requires cleaning with a blade solvent.
Q: Does this high-tooth-count blade work on aluminum extrusions?
A: No. While the tooth count is high, the ATB (Alternate Top Bevel) tooth geometry features extremely sharp, fragile points designed exclusively to shear wood and plastic fibers. Striking aluminum will chip these fine points instantly. You must use a TCG (Triple Chip Grind) blade for metal.