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Discussion Starter · #1 ·
I the next year I will be putting down 1500-2000 sq-ft of laminate flooring. I have a 12" Miter and 10" table saw. Any recommendations on blades. I am more concerned with blade life. I have carbide blades with 60-92 teeth .I thought I read somewhere that they made a special blade for laminate that the teeth are different. I can use the blades I have but probably that much flooring (Mohawk they said was hard on blade) i can save my trim blades and get a special one for laminate. Any thoughts appreciated.
thanks
 

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Laminate flooring will ruin a blade in seconds----save your good ones for the trim.

All cuts are hidden by trim so cut quality is not terribly important.

Use a medium quality (read cheap ish) blade----I like to use a cutting box and a Skill Saw--but if you don't mind forking out for a couple of 12" blades then use the chop saw.

Wear goggles when cutting---those chips are very nasty --Good luck---Mike---
 

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personally, I would use 1 good blade on the table saw and invest the balance on a laminate cutter. Alot less mess/dust and no running to and from the worksite to the saw (creating laminate dust around your installation area is worse than drywall dust!). DON'T FORGET THE KNEE PADS! :)
 

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I the next year I will be putting down 1500-2000 sq-ft of laminate flooring. I have a 12" Miter and 10" table saw. Any recommendations on blades. I am more concerned with blade life. I have carbide blades with 60-92 teeth .I thought I read somewhere that they made a special blade for laminate that the teeth are different. I can use the blades I have but probably that much flooring (Mohawk they said was hard on blade) i can save my trim blades and get a special one for laminate. Any thoughts appreciated.
thanks
Check this web site and you can get so pointer's. http://www.carpentry-tips-and-tricks.com/Cutting-laminate-flooring.html
 

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Sorry Bobender,
I meant a particular tool that operates similar to a paper cutter. No power source, no rotating blades. you can buy different models for 250.00 and up or rent them from bldg supply stores, rent-alls etc. It will cut your work and subsequent clean-up in half. I've used the 'EZ-13 Shear' cutter but there's probably cheaper knock-offs out there. good luck.
 

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Discussion Starter · #7 ·
Here are the ones I have seen. About 400 sq/ft of the laminate is 12" tiles


http://www.homedepot.com/$0---$30/h_d1/N-5yc1vZ/Ntt-laminate%2520cutter/searchNav-true/h_d2/Navigation?keyword=laminate+cutter&selectedCatgry=SEARCH+ALL&langId=-1&storeId=10051&catalogId=10053&omni=%2525240%252520-%252520%25252430
 

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I bought my guys the ez shear 9 #109. below is a link with the picture of it. The 12" tiles would take an overly expensive cutter for your job and i'd probably just use a small table saw for those pieces ( you'll want the table saw for your finall cuts anyway)


http://www.bullettools.com/ProductD...gonomic-Tapping-Block-Bucket-angle-guide.aspx

hope this helps....the other ones you saw may work fine, just showing what we use. :)
 

· Tileguy
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When I was doing laminate flooring I used a 12" chop with an 80 tooth carbide blade. I tracked the blade wear and consumption for a time. On average the blade was shot after every 240 square feet of installation. A 10" table saw blade 60 tooth would last for several jobs.:)
 

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Discussion Starter · #11 ·
I think I will try a cheap portable table saw - Found one at Menards for $100. I may still end up buying a Bullet EZ shear. But i still have to rip the planks.

I think I will use cheap carbide 7 1/4" blades. I can get a 10 pack 24 tooth for $40. Or should I spend $5-6 and get some 40 tooth. will more teeth last longer?

Thanks all for the tips
 
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