Best Reviews of Forrest DH10807100 Duraline 10-Inch 80 Tooth HI-A/T Thin Kerf Melamine and Plywood Cutting Saw Blade with 5/8-Inch Arbor

Forrest DH10807100 Duraline 10-Inch 80 Tooth HI-A/T Thin Kerf Melamine and Plywood Cutting Saw Blade with 5/8-Inch ArborBuy Forrest DH10807100 Duraline 10-Inch 80 Tooth HI-A/T Thin Kerf Melamine and Plywood Cutting Saw Blade with 5/8-Inch Arbor

Forrest DH10807100 Duraline 10-Inch 80 Tooth HI-A/T Thin Kerf Melamine and Plywood Cutting Saw Blade with 5/8-Inch Arbor Product Description:



  • 20° Face Hook for easy feed
  • DOUBLE HARD and 40% STRONGER C-4 CARBIDE will give up to 300% longer life between sharpenings.
  • Ends second-step finishing (jointing and sanding not required).
  • Buy and sharpen ONE blade instead of 3, (24T Rip, 50T Combination, 80T Crosscut).
  • Ends cutting 1/16" oversize to allow for RESURFACING

Product Description

For chipless cutting of two sided melamine, vinyl, polyester, and kortron. Recommended for thin, low pressure, two-sided laminates and veneer plywood. For thin veneers on flakeboard - fire-retardant, laminated (1 or 2 sides), masonite, fiber board, lumbercore, glue-ups, hard/soft woods and chemically impregnated wood. Duraline Hi-A/T advantages: Eliminates need for a small scoring saw blade on table saw work. The 40 DEG points slice through thin bottom layers with no tears or chips. Made with double-hard C-4 submicron carbide for longer life between sharpenings.

Customer Reviews

Most helpful customer reviews

18 of 19 people found the following review helpful.
5Hands-down, the best laminate blade I've ever used
By A Customer
I was having some serious issues with my previous laminate / crosscut blade, but since it was a relatively expensive blade from a reputable blade manufacturer, I assumed that tear-out on melamine and oak plywood was just something you had to live with. At a friend's suggestion, I brought the red oak plywood that was showing serious tearout on crosscuts to his shop, where he uses the Forrest Duraline HI-A/T crosscut blade. It's unbelievable -- the cuts with the Forrest Duraline blade are flawless, on both the top and bottom faces of the plywood! It's well worth the money for this blade. Why spend your time working on a project when your blade results in mediocre results??

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
5As advertised!
By K. Yasutome
I have been using a 60 tooth forrest blade with a zero clearance insert for years. The (crosscut) results on plywood were just ok. One of my friends suggested I use an 80 tooth blade so I ordered a Forrest melamine/plywood 80 tooth blade. Man! what a difference!. Even without a zero clearance insert this thing is flawless. I am not sure I will be using anything else now. I guess the only reason to switch back to the 60 tooth would be if I wanted to do very hard wood, otherwise it will probably be my go to blade.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
5Unsurpassed Blade for Difficult Veneers
By Brad Harmon
This blade was purchased for use on bamboo plywood, which is notoriously difficult to work with, as regular big box store blades can give poor results even with the grain, let alone on cross-cuts. This blade has given me excellent results both with and across the grain on bamboo and oak veneer plywood, as well as HPL and melamine covered cabinet doors, with no split out on the bottom face. If you are looking at this blade, it goes without saying that this is NOT a general purpose blade for ripping and cross-cutting solid wood (though might be acceptable for those working with very thin pieces of solid wood, such as jewelry boxes).

See all 3 customer reviews...


Latest Price: See on Amazon.com!
More Info: See on Amazon.com!
See Customers Review: See on Amazon.com!

Buy Forrest DH10807100 Duraline 10-Inch 80 Tooth HI-A/T Thin Kerf Melamine and Plywood Cutting Saw Blade with 5/8-Inch Arbor