good point on the holes for chips, if possible, this is the best way to go. If it's not possible, keep raising the hole saw up to get the chips out, otherwise the chips fill the teeth, then it won't cut and you just heat it up. I keep a large acid brush on the drill press for this. Raise the saw, run the brush across the teeth to clean them up, and drill again. Also, as stated, keep the damn things lubed. Oil is cheap. I just use Enco #1 fluid, IIRC, but I've used old motor oil, gear lube, whatever. Also, turn it SLOWWWWW. I run mine at 150 rpm's. Keep that thing cool. Once you overheat the holesaw, it's scrapmetal. done right, a single holesaw can do hundreds of holes in steel. Done wrong, you won't finish the first one.