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Dual Cut Saw

NJ Diver

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 25, 2010
Messages
92
I see that several manufacturers have jumped in on the dual cut bandwagon (Dual Cut / Twin Blade, name varies by mfg I think). Is this just more of a fad tool or do these things serve a real purpose?

I've never used one so I'd be interested in some opinions of those who have. What does it seem to do better than a regular saw?
 
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redleg

Member
Joined
Feb 28, 2010
Messages
9
Location
ohio
I bought the craftsman one when it first came out. I cut angle iron with it and did a pretty good job on it with no kick back. My dad has used it a few times and thought it was great saw.
 

sawatch

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 20, 2010
Messages
1,134
Location
Southern Colorado
I purchased to cut metal paneling, roofing pro-panel, construction grade work. Worked okay, as does my 4" cut-off angle grinder, just as loud too. Blades went dull too quickly and were more expensive than cut-off blades. Overall not worthy of $ spent.
 
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2dieseljohn

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 11, 2006
Messages
163
Location
COOSBAY, OR
When they first came out we had one on our rescue truck for the "what if" factor. We used it a couple of times for some hard and unusual extractions instead of our sazall. Worked well but would bind a little on the newer car steel High strength A posts. A little spray bottle of H20 and Dawn dish soap helped with that. Not enough Amps.
 
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domain

Well-known member
Joined
May 16, 2010
Messages
902
When they first came out we had one on our rescue truck for the "what if" factor. We used it a couple of times for some hard and unusual extractions instead of our sazall. Worked well but would bind a little on the newer car steel High strength A posts. A little spray bottle of H20 and Dawn dish soap helped with that. Not enough Amps.

I too noticed it was not very powerful on the infomercial of the original. He went to cut himself out of the diamond plate box and I heard a few times where the blades slowed down almost to nothing. Great idea and concept, but the only way I would buy one is-1. Higher motor amps 2. Lower cost blades as I'm sure they are more than standard cut-offs.... :)
 

Grogan14

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 6, 2009
Messages
197
I have a Task Force brand one that I got for ~$25 (75% off) at Lowe's a couple years back. Hadn't used it until just the other day, when I used it to cut a couple pieces of rebar in a pinch. Cut through it like butter. I own a variety of contractor-grade saws, and wouldn't have given this a second glance at full price, but on clearance, I couldn't pass it up.
 
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Ign

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 7, 2006
Messages
12,769
Location
Butte Peak ND
Scam. Merely an attempt to capture our society's need for NEW, when there have been tools that do the same job better for decades - - but those old tools are boring.

And yeah, just like metal cutting circulars and dry cuts, blade cost should be a significant consideration.

IOW an abrasive blade in an angle grinder will do just as well at a fraction of the cost. If you're itching to spend money after that get a portaband.
 
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