these blades work amazingly well. after seeing this video, I bought some to give them a try and they cut through 1/4" plate like butter. Helped me with building an adapter for my transmission jack.
My boss supplied us with blades and was always Lenox and we ended up smoking a Milwaukee sawzall cutting thru 4" cast replumbing old houses. But now we use these and they very strong and durable
+Frankie Gambino Thanks Frankie! I was surprised to see little/no damage at all.....especially after the heavy duty cutting.....I think Diablo is onto something with these blades!
I'm impressive. I had to choose many different hole saw brand and it is going to be Diablo. Thank you for show video. I had like to push this diablo saw hole this far to met my need. It is possible that it can be used on heatsink if I need make hole for my project?
I actually bought a couple of these blades some months ago. I bought 2 of every kind that I normaly use and im still on the first blade for all of them. and considering I use my Sawzall for just about everything, I gotta say thay have been worth the purchase.
I have been using the same diablo blade for almost a year. I use it for tree branches. If I don't have to whip out a chainsaw, my Ryobi cordless recip saw works just fine.
I used the harbor fteight 10 amp bauer sawzall with carbide diablo blade to replace pipe in a crawl space from galvanized to abs and it cut like knife through butter 3 times then started to give out.
I use a lot of blades, these have been the best by far in terms of cutting heavy steel where we could not allow sparks to be present. However, after 5 or so cuts through heavy I beams / channel, if the blade gets hot enough the teeth melt off instantly ruining the blade so I'd suggest using WD or some sort of lube to keep the blade cool when doing multiple cuts. As always, if the teeth do not fail, all brands I've ever tried eventually snap at the tang end flush with the chuck rendering a good blade useless.
Real Tool Reviews bought two of the 9 inch demo demons a while back and I deconstruct wooden pallets by cutting through the joint between the boards and cutting the nails. Today I estimate that I cut roughly 1500 nails in oak pallets today and I'm still on the first blade. The last one I had was just a bi metal blade (no fancy carbide teeth or any of that, but was still a diablo) and it lasted me about 4 and a half months of use. These things are amazing and I won't buy anything else, the edge is still fine on my old blade and it tool the hole in the tang failing for me to finally get new blades! That's right, the edge lasted longer than the tang lol
+Eric Reitzel Haha....it reminded me of when I used to run cabling.....the "boss" used a recip saw to cut giant notches out of the floor joists above the 1st floor drop ceiling in a bank to make room for some runs & caused major structural damage....just because you "can" cut it....doesnt mean you "should" cut it ;)
And here I was concerned about how many blades I'd need to make 40 cuts through 3/8 rebar. This video just saved me $150 on an angle grinder... I guess the question now is, should I tell my wife?
Wow that was some demo! Deff will have to pick up a few of those carbide tipped diablo blades. The diablo carbide tipped blades are prob a quarter of the price of the milwaukee and just as good or almost as good but affordable for the weekend warrior.
nem4x4 I can tell you from experience the Diablo blades out last the Milwaukee blades 3-1. I can cut a 12 gauge oil tank into 4 pieces with one Diablo blade. I takes almost an entire pack of Milwaukee blades for the same job.
I'll be making a stress test video for the diablo metal cutting carbide and it'll be up in about two days, FWIW. Right now I'm about 14 lineal feet through 3/8" steel and about 12 feet through 1/4" steel. snapped some teeth off when I messed up and pinched the blade but the remaining teeth are doing well.
+ronnies07 I have no clue....I did not have any thick S/S around here to cut up.....hopefully someone that knows will comment with their experience with it.
+DC Rickerson Thanks DC! I was surprised to see zero damage after all those nails....I thought the teeth would have at least wore down, but the only thing missing was the paint!
Technically "yes".....however unlike a chainsaw, there would be zero chip/dust ejection aside from the 3/4" stroke.....meaning it would gum-up or stick and not cut well at all.
Real Tool Reviews great content on your channel. Keep up the solid work. Alot of your reviews have definitely helped me in purchased.. Love my Makita Brushless circ saw!
these blades work amazingly well. after seeing this video, I bought some to give them a try and they cut through 1/4" plate like butter. Helped me with building an adapter for my transmission jack.
that blade is a monster, I've cut things like fence rails, roofing, tons of nail embedded wood, and some 4x4 all with the same blade
My boss supplied us with blades and was always Lenox and we ended up smoking a Milwaukee sawzall cutting thru 4" cast replumbing old houses. But now we use these and they very strong and durable
+Eric DuPlantier Nice.....I didnt have any cast iron to cut up, but I am glad to know that they work well....thanks!
Good video ,those blades passed those test with flying colors !
+Frankie Gambino Thanks Frankie! I was surprised to see little/no damage at all.....especially after the heavy duty cutting.....I think Diablo is onto something with these blades!
Diablo is a MONSTER.
Using them to clean up overgrown brush in my yard! Amazing!
these cordless saws are great for a camp saws to get fire wood
I'm impressive. I had to choose many different hole saw brand and it is going to be Diablo. Thank you for show video. I had like to push this diablo saw hole this far to met my need. It is possible that it can be used on heatsink if I need make hole for my project?
I actually bought a couple of these blades some months ago. I bought 2 of every kind that I normaly use and im still on the first blade for all of them. and considering I use my Sawzall for just about everything, I gotta say thay have been worth the purchase.
+chase french Wow....2 of each.....you are definitely set for a while :)
I have been using the same diablo blade for almost a year. I use it for tree branches. If I don't have to whip out a chainsaw, my Ryobi cordless recip saw works just fine.
+George Moore Anytime you arent dealing with fumes....its a good thing! :)
Can this blade used with Bosch jigsaw m/c
Great review !! I have a makita angle grinder and i use the diablo grinding wheels so far the best grinding wheel i have used .
+CATERPILLAR Thanks! I have not used the Diablo cutting wheels yet...I will have to check them out!
one of the best tool review channels
Again thanks for keeping it real and keep the great videos coming.
Great video,, who makes the press and what model is it?
I used the harbor fteight 10 amp bauer sawzall with carbide diablo blade to replace pipe in a crawl space from galvanized to abs and it cut like knife through butter 3 times then started to give out.
I use a lot of blades, these have been the best by far in terms of cutting heavy steel where we could not allow sparks to be present. However, after 5 or so cuts through heavy I beams / channel, if the blade gets hot enough the teeth melt off instantly ruining the blade so I'd suggest using WD or some sort of lube to keep the blade cool when doing multiple cuts. As always, if the teeth do not fail, all brands I've ever tried eventually snap at the tang end flush with the chuck rendering a good blade useless.
you should have put at least 3 more nails in wood. lol
Wow that's impressive, at my Home Depot the price is about 30% less than Milwaukee . I'll give them a try .
+Steve Rob Thanks Steve! Wow....30% less for the carbide blades? Nice!
Real Tool Reviews bought two of the 9 inch demo demons a while back and I deconstruct wooden pallets by cutting through the joint between the boards and cutting the nails. Today I estimate that I cut roughly 1500 nails in oak pallets today and I'm still on the first blade. The last one I had was just a bi metal blade (no fancy carbide teeth or any of that, but was still a diablo) and it lasted me about 4 and a half months of use. These things are amazing and I won't buy anything else, the edge is still fine on my old blade and it tool the hole in the tang failing for me to finally get new blades! That's right, the edge lasted longer than the tang lol
Good stuff. I'll keep this in mind next time I need to buy some blades.
Great video thanks sir for that
I like how you used many diff types of saws.
+Jursaw Well thanks! I am glad you noticed.....I figured it would be better than seeing the exact same one in every scene!
First part of the video is About the best test Ive seen....Reminds me of some of the trim carpenters I've went behind....lmao....
+Eric Reitzel Haha....it reminded me of when I used to run cabling.....the "boss" used a recip saw to cut giant notches out of the floor joists above the 1st floor drop ceiling in a bank to make room for some runs & caused major structural damage....just because you "can" cut it....doesnt mean you "should" cut it ;)
And here I was concerned about how many blades I'd need to make 40 cuts through 3/8 rebar.
This video just saved me $150 on an angle grinder... I guess the question now is, should I tell my wife?
Do they snap as easy as the regular blades? You know when they get pinched when used in real situations, 5 to 6 times the price so got to know
Ive never had one snap when i did steel construction.
Wow that was some demo! Deff will have to pick up a few of those carbide tipped diablo blades. The diablo carbide tipped blades are prob a quarter of the price of the milwaukee and just as good or almost as good but affordable for the weekend warrior.
I paid about $17 PER diablo 9" metal blade @ home depot. not cheap.
Justin Crediblename same price as the milwaukee carbide blades.. I will buy the milwaukee for the same price
Any way you can do a durability test between the two different blades to see if it is actually 20X better
+nem4x4 Let me see what I can do....I dont have that many blades here at the moment, but good idea!
nem4x4 I can tell you from experience the Diablo blades out last the Milwaukee blades 3-1. I can cut a 12 gauge oil tank into 4 pieces with one Diablo blade. I takes almost an entire pack of Milwaukee blades for the same job.
I'll be making a stress test video for the diablo metal cutting carbide and it'll be up in about two days, FWIW.
Right now I'm about 14 lineal feet through 3/8" steel and about 12 feet through 1/4" steel.
snapped some teeth off when I messed up and pinched the blade but the remaining teeth are doing well.
So more often than not, you'll end up replacing the blade without using most of the blade? The front end hardly ever gets used.
Omg, now that's a review
great video but you are not providing the sizes of the blades being used or the part numbers
+John Mark Kucera check the link in the description....
WOW! WOW! WOW! You blasted on the amount of nails but it was glorious!!! AWESOME REVIEW!
+Gold63Beast Thanks! Haha...yeah I was regretting that after I started nailing....I thought that I was going to run out of room!
Any idea on how these would perform on say 2.5" diameter stainless rod stock?
A lenox power curve blade did the job, but it was not easy.
+ronnies07 I have no clue....I did not have any thick S/S around here to cut up.....hopefully someone that knows will comment with their experience with it.
Great set of blades. Thanks
+BADD400 CB700 drums Thanks!
Man, none of those damn nail guns you own could have gotten this job done for you!
great information....you are a real pro.keep it up
If you get a chance to, could you review Milwaukee's new carbide sawzall blades? I'd like to see how they compare to these beasts
I plan to once I find them at the Home Depot.
nice demo
Did you use just one blade to cut all that stuff?
Nice video, love Diablo blades!
+Bothuhead 19 Thanks!
Very nice video as always. These blades look pretty tough !
+DC Rickerson Thanks DC! I was surprised to see zero damage after all those nails....I thought the teeth would have at least wore down, but the only thing missing was the paint!
Fine job
+George S Thanks a lot George :)
Fantastic. THANK YOU!
Diablo blade is 12" can cut down 22" tree, not 12". A blade length X2 is the tree diameter. Same as a 16" chainsaw can cut down a 32" diameter tree.
Technically "yes".....however unlike a chainsaw, there would be zero chip/dust ejection aside from the 3/4" stroke.....meaning it would gum-up or stick and not cut well at all.
Thanks
is really good
Wy your don't make how saw kits!
Several nails were harmed in the making of this video
Good video
+sheamus cowan Thanks Sheamus!
Works great
cost pls?
great review as always!
+Wild Goose Thanks!
esa diABLO le ace honor a su nombre un verdadero demonio
Sppppeeeeerrrrr
👌👌👍👍👏👏🤲🤲🇹🇷🇹🇷
kerf of the saw teeth
Vari nise
That blade is the monster nothing works better for cutting nothing everything wastes time n money
the video is spread up while cutting threw the nails
I DON'T it is swift to attempt to show how well the blade cuts through heavy metal by speeding up the video.
Teeth break off too easy. They also turn whatever your cutting red. I prefer Morse's carbide blades, Lenox are good too.
the blade is reversible per the tool...
Starving African children could have built a house with those nails!
I find the Milwaukee Axe recip blades out perform these diablos.
+Mike Neufeld I like Milwaukee recip blades.....maybe a head-to-head can be arranged.....thanks Mike!
Real Tool Reviews great content on your channel. Keep up the solid work. Alot of your reviews have definitely helped me in purchased.. Love my Makita Brushless circ saw!
+Mike Neufeld Awesome! I used the Makita today actually.....it SCREAMS through the wood....excellent saw!
can you say over kill lol
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍💖💖💖💖💖
+
Nails can’ fix stupid......