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Simple Green blade cleaning

Blog entry by steveosshop posted 44 days ago 168 reads 0 times favorited 8 comments Add to Favorites

I thought I would put this out there as a blog. I had been looking for something to clean my sawblades with. I thought about some of the kits available from woodoworking stores and online, but while I was looking found a blog on simple green. I started researching that and found a couple quotes from members of the Freud company about the product. I don’t know how credible they are, because I could not find anything out about them or it on any publication from Freud. It did spark my interest tho. Simple green does not contain lye or any other harsh chemicals, so as far as I know it does not harm the bond on carbide blades(don’t quote me on it though). As for the result, I think it worked rather well. I dilluted the concentrate 1:10 with water and let the blade soak for about 15mins. I then took a toothbrush and scrubbed some of the tough areas. After that I rinsed the blades with water and dried extremely well to keep rust from building up. After that some WD40 and back to the saws. I used the blades that were cleaned tonight on my Squirrel Whirler project and everything cut like new again. If anybody has heard anything about it harming the blades let me know. I don’t want to work with dangerous equipment, but so far so good.

Heres my cleaning kit; Simple Green, a tooth brush, and a auto oil pan.

Photobucket

-- Steve-o

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steveosshop

178 posts in 68 days


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8 comments so far

View PaBull's profile

PaBull

155 posts in 108 days


posted 44 days ago

Thanks, my kind of stuff; off the shelf from the kitchen.

-- Mark 6:3 Is not this the carpenter, the son of Mary ...

View Sawdust2's profile

Sawdust2

827 posts in 530 days


posted 44 days ago

Works great. Been using it for a couple of years, now.
Haven’t had a tooth fly off yet.

Lee

-- No piece is cut too short. It was meant for a smaller project.

View GaryK's profile

GaryK

8404 posts in 431 days


posted 43 days ago

The stuff works great! Beed using it for years. Instead of a toothbrush I use a small brass bristle brush. Works very fast.

I pour the leftovers in a jar and keep using it. I use it full strength and have been using the same batch for months.

-- Gary, East TX -- The longest journey begins with a single step.

View BroDave's profile

BroDave

76 posts in 257 days


posted 43 days ago

Hmm.. I haven’t thought about Simple Green or loosing carbide teeth.
I use Easy-Off oven cleaner, the cold oven formula. No fumes and no scrubbing plus it has a lemony fresh scent..

Does or could the oven cleaner cause the bond on the teeth to fail?
I’m too old and fat to dodge bullets.

-- .

View Sac's profile

Sac

182 posts in 76 days


posted 43 days ago

Great post. I’ll have to look and see if we still have any.

-- Jerry, Measure 10 times cut once. Set in the foothills of the Smokey's

View rikkor's profile

rikkor

7112 posts in 317 days


posted 43 days ago

Simple Green is great stuff!

-- Maplewood, MN

View daltxguy's profile

daltxguy

218 posts in 357 days


posted 43 days ago

I’ve been using Simple Green on bicycle frame and parts since 2001. No harm has ever come to either one of us.

-- Steve, New Zealand, www.steveracz.com

View Gofor's profile

Gofor

46 posts in 230 days


posted 43 days ago

I use denatured alcohol and it also works well. Simple green is acidic, so rinsing and drying well is the key, but it won’t harm the carbide or the bond to the steel. Easy-Off, on the other hand, is a lye based cleaner, and will degrade the brazing material between the carbide and the blade (most have some aluminum in the alloy) as well as cause pits in some of the less expensive carbide teeth. I used to use easy off and greased lightning, but quit after I had a couple miter saw blades start slinging teeth at me. Upon examining them, I also found the remaining teeth were pitted.

Go

-- Go http://ncwoodworker.net/pp/showgallery.php?cat=500&ppuser=730

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