Saw Blade Burning
RPM and Surface Speed: Why High RPM Burns Metal Cutting Saw Blades
How RPM, blade diameter and surface speed create heat, burn marks and premature saw blade failure in steel and stainless cutting.
Focus keyword: saw blade RPM too highSecondary keywords: metal cutting blade surface speed, cold saw blade overheating, circular saw blade burn marks
Search intent: A user wants to know whether machine RPM is causing blade overheating.
Two saws can show the same RPM but create different heat because blade diameter changes surface speed.
A 350 mm blade at the same RPM as a 250 mm blade has a higher tooth speed, which can quickly overheat steel or stainless applications.
Practical takeaway:RPM is only a motor number. The real cutting condition is surface speed at the tooth, and a larger blade at the same RPM runs a higher tooth speed.
How excessive speed burns a blade
When RPM is too high, the tooth contacts metal too fast to form a controlled chip. It rubs and skids instead of shearing. HSS teeth can lose hardness, carbide tips can micro-chip and chips can turn blue or weld to the tooth.
Real industrial evidence
The Blade Mfg. Co. publishes reference cutting speed ranges for HSS, carbide tipped, cermet tipped, friction and abrasive cutting. The ranges differ widely, proving that more RPM is not a universal productivity strategy.
Cold Saw Shop separates blade recommendations by application, including low-carbon steel, medium-carbon steel and stainless/high-alloy metals.
Recommended blade direction
Use Ciswerk Cermet Cold Saw Blade for suitable high-speed carbon steel cutting on rigid machines. Use Ciswerk TCT Cold Saw Blade for stainless or mixed steel applications with coating and a starting RPM recommendation. Use Ciswerk HSS Circular Saw Blade on older fixed-speed coolant-fed saws when the machine speed fits HSS cutting.