Yes, the teeth are replaceable, takes a special tool and practice to set the new or old teeth so they run to make a clean cut with the correct tooth pitch and sequence. Then, after sharpening each tooth, you have to set them all to the same height so the saw cuts correctly. On an 80 inch blade, you'll want to pack lunch. It takes a while, and if you are cutting old growth hardwood with high dollar value, you want cuts to be clean, clear, straight, and near perfect, or your money goes up the sawdust chute. If the blade is done right, you have all the teeth tracking and zero tooth marks on the plank. Well, that was the goal, anyway.
Just did a search and found they are still available, as is the insertion tool... http://www.simondsint.com/circularsaws/Pages/Items/08999F.aspx On Wed, Aug 21, 2019 at 12:02 PM Randy Bennell via Mercedes < mercedes@okiebenz.com> wrote: > On 21/08/2019 1:16 PM, G Mann via Mercedes wrote: > > I think I may be one of the few left that still know how to sharpen and > set > > the teeth in a round blade mill... I'll have to add a line in my CV to > > include that.. ha.. > > > Were they replaceable teeth? > > _______________________________________ > http://www.okiebenz.com > > To search list archives http://www.okiebenz.com/archive/ > > To Unsubscribe or change delivery options go to: > http://mail.okiebenz.com/mailman/listinfo/mercedes_okiebenz.com > > _______________________________________ http://www.okiebenz.com To search list archives http://www.okiebenz.com/archive/ To Unsubscribe or change delivery options go to: http://mail.okiebenz.com/mailman/listinfo/mercedes_okiebenz.com