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Cutting Parameters

TCT Blade for Inox: Tooth Geometry, Coating and Cutting Parameters Explained

Technical guide to TCT blade for inox selection, including tooth geometry, PVD coating, stainless tube vs solid bar cutting and feed/speed vocabulary.

Focus keyword: TCT blade for inox

Secondary keywords: inox cutting blade, stainless steel TCT saw blade, carbide tipped inox blade, cold saw blade for stainless steel

Search intent: An engineer or buyer wants technical selection details for inox cutting.

Inox cutting combines high cutting force, heat concentration, possible work hardening and chip control problems. If the blade rubs instead of cutting, stainless can harden at the surface and accelerate edge wear.

If chips remain in the tooth gullet, heat rises and the blade begins to lose stability. This is why tooth geometry, coating and feed cannot be separated.

Practical takeaway:

Inox is a common market term for stainless steel. A TCT blade for inox is a tungsten carbide tipped circular saw blade designed for stainless steel cutting, not a general carbide wood blade and not a generic aluminum blade.

Tooth geometry: the real cutting edge

For many stainless steel circular saw blades, Triple Chip Grind is a common tooth concept because it balances edge strength and chip control. A TCG pattern usually alternates a chamfered tooth and a flat raker tooth, helping the blade handle harder or more abrasive materials.

Geometry factorIndustrial meaningWhy it matters for inox
Tooth countNumber of teeth around the bladeHigher tooth count is usually better for thin-wall tube; lower tooth count may be needed for solids to create chip space.
Rake angleHow aggressively the tooth enters the materialToo aggressive can grab; too mild can rub and generate heat.
Gullet sizeChip pocket in front of the toothInsufficient gullet capacity causes chip packing and heat buildup.
TCG or special grindTooth shape at the cutting edgeHelps distribute cutting load and improve durability in harder metals.
Blade body stabilityFlatness, tensioning, slots and runout controlPoor stability causes vibration, noise, burr and premature tooth chipping.

Coating: heat, friction and chip flow

Coating is not decoration. In stainless steel cutting, coating can reduce friction, support chip flow and improve resistance to heat at the cutting edge. Sawtek describes PVD coating as improving chip evacuation, reducing clogging and reducing heat buildup.

For buyers, the right question is not only “Is it coated?” but “Which coating is used for this stainless application, and what machine and cutting condition was it designed for?”

Solid bar vs tube: do not use the same logic

Sawtek separates solid cutting and tube cutting. Its solid-cutting version uses a lower tooth count range for solid materials, while its tube-cutting version uses a higher tooth count range for tubes with wall thickness over 3 mm.

ApplicationTypical blade directionProcess risk
Stainless solid round barLower tooth count than tube, stronger tooth, enough gullet capacityChip packing, heat and tooth overload.
Stainless tube over 3 mm wallHigher tooth count, stable clamping, geometry for burr controlVibration, exit burr and thin-wall deformation.
Thin-wall inox tubeHigh tooth count and low runout blade bodyTooth shock and burr at exit.
Multiple tube bundleApplication-specific production blade, correct fill ratio and chip brushUneven engagement and chip recutting.

Starting parameters: use manufacturer data, then test

Public blade data shows how parameter language is used in the industry. Kinkelder gives suggested cutting speed and feed-per-tooth ranges for its own series and also notes the importance of fill ratio, wire brushing and high-quality oil. These numbers should not be copied blindly to another blade, but they show the correct technical vocabulary.

  • Cutting speed is usually expressed as m/min or surface feet per minute.
  • Feed is often expressed as mm/tooth for production circular sawing.
  • Tooth count must be selected together with material section and feed.
  • Coolant, oil or dry cutting must follow the blade and machine recommendation.
  • A chip brush is important in production because recut chips damage the tooth edge.

FAQ

What does inox mean?

In many markets, inox is a short commercial term for stainless steel. Buyers may search TCT blade for inox, inox cutting blade or stainless steel TCT saw blade for the same application.

Is PVD coating necessary?

It depends on volume, material and saw type. For repeated stainless cutting, PVD-coated or cermet options often make sense because heat and chip flow are major life factors.

Sources Used

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