Spoiler alert - it's already happened, but I can't decide how to feel about it. Mostly I'm wondering if it's something I should consider being okay to do in the future.
I'm helping someone build a shop. He wanted to rip some steel studs to make long, thin angle stock, which we used to secure a first layer of ICF block. He picked up one of these discs at Lowes, brought a Dewalt 10" jobsite tablesaw, and did probably 10 pieces that way:


Anyway, nothing caught fire, melted, or otherwise broke, but I haven't been able to find much about anyone using tablesaws with this kind of abrasive disc to cut ferrous metal of any kind. I read the reviews for that Bluefire disc and seen some success stories with the toothed Steel Demon type blades, but always in regards to using them with regular circular saws.
Any thoughts? Would this kind of use cause eventual damage to the tablesaw? Safety concerns? Is there a better way that's roughly as fast and efficient? Or is this a pretty clever solution that's made possible by a cutoff wheel with the correct size arbor that seems to be made for it?
I'm helping someone build a shop. He wanted to rip some steel studs to make long, thin angle stock, which we used to secure a first layer of ICF block. He picked up one of these discs at Lowes, brought a Dewalt 10" jobsite tablesaw, and did probably 10 pieces that way:


Anyway, nothing caught fire, melted, or otherwise broke, but I haven't been able to find much about anyone using tablesaws with this kind of abrasive disc to cut ferrous metal of any kind. I read the reviews for that Bluefire disc and seen some success stories with the toothed Steel Demon type blades, but always in regards to using them with regular circular saws.
Any thoughts? Would this kind of use cause eventual damage to the tablesaw? Safety concerns? Is there a better way that's roughly as fast and efficient? Or is this a pretty clever solution that's made possible by a cutoff wheel with the correct size arbor that seems to be made for it?
