Diablo blades: Cement siding

Cutting OSB

If you’re working with fiber cement of any significant amount and using typical saw blades instead of purpose built cutters like the Diablo blades we used for a siding project, then chances are pretty good you’re throwing money away.

‣ MyFixitUpLife Diablo Blades Cement Siding Blade.
Diablo Blades Cement Siding Blade.

This leads to a bigger question: When do you spend your money on a project: Up front? Or after going cheap? Note: It’s going to get spent anyway; it’s just a matter of when.

We’ll get back to this.

The 10-inch and 7 1/4-inch Diablo blades we used cutting cementitious siding rocked. They lasted through the entire project and, just as important, worked well cutting brutal-on-blades fiber cement from start to finsh.

We used the 10-inch, 6-tooth blade on the miter saw, which enabled us to gang cut 2-pieces at a time, significantly speeding up our work. You can use 10-inch Diablo blades on table saws as well. We loaded the 7 1/4-inch blade on our circular saw for rake and rip cuts.

Diablo says these blades produce less respirable dust than other blades. Since we did not have our respirable-dust- meter with us, I’ll take their word for it. For the dust that was there, we attached a shop vacuum to the miter saw and wore dust masks as needed.

Which brings us back to the big question about tooling up. Diablo blades cost more than typical wood-cutting blades. But not only do they last longer cutting fiber cement, they cut cleaner (meaning less tear-out) and they cut faster. Plus they’re the go-to for other projects we run into like cementitious backer board for floor and wall tile.

Conclusion: Diablo blades were well worth the up front investment for this project. They enabled us to do nice work faster and cleaner than if we cheaped out on the front end. And that goes for other projects too where we used Diablo blades, like Save My Bakery on Food Network where we used them non-stop for days at a time from rough to finish.

The right stuff: 1    |    The cheap stuff: 0

‣ MyFixitUpLife Cutting OSB
Cutting OSB for Save My Bakery.

 

‣ MyFixitUpLife DIY
Shop Captain Andy Doyle making cuts for a barn door on Save My Bakery

 

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Mark
A licensed contractor, tool expert, wood and outdoor enthusiast, and elite Spartan Race competitor, he writes about home improvement and tools for national magazines and websites, and teaches hands-on clinics for other remodeling professionals. Check out his book, The Carpenter's Notebook.

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Comments (8)

I’m gonna go and try Diablo blades. I had Avanti Pros and they are starting to get damaged. Thanks for the article!

Thanks Josh. Let us know how they work for you.

Yup! We’ve tried to go the cheaper route before and we’ve paid dearly. Thanks for sharing. Hope this saves folks money down the line.

Yo Mike! We’re blade snobs too. Love it. Good blades help do good work. Thanks for checking in.

Thank you for the article and advice on getting the right tools from the get go for a project. It just doesn’t pay sometimes to try to go the cheaper route.

Gus–Thanks for writing buddy! We actually don’t often cut two pieces (gang-cutting). Yes, it may cut work in half in some cases, but it’s inherently inaccurate in others. we love our miter saws too. They accurate and stable. Great for DIY and pro stuff. Thanks again for checking in!

I like how you cut 2 pieces at once with your miter saw. This would literally cut the work in half, no pun intended. I have used a miter saw before, and they’re fantastic. My dad has one is his garage that he uses for projects. Is the miter saw your favorite kind of saw?

These certainly sound like very durable blades if they were able to cut through fiber cement throughout the entire project. Tools can be a very worthwhile investment, so it is always important to do your research before purchasing them. Quality saw blades can last you a good while.

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