Yeah, the fixed orbital saws are kind of a midway setting halfway between wood and metal, but the super sawzall lets you adjust it for optimal on either wood (full) or metal (none)
Those things are enormous. I can hear them laughing at the $24 saw I bought from Harbor Freight. To be fair, I only needed to cut a PVC pipe out of a hall toilet drain. I never even got around to doing that, though. I'm sure the plumber did a better job than I would have.
That's not an easy question to answer. It will depend on what your cutting, what saw your using, and how hard you are pushing the tool. But as a point of reference, these blades usually aren't sold in singles, and this is one of the top brands. The blade won't stop cutting, it will just progressively take longer and longer to make cuts. If you're planning to cut up trees like in this demo, and you are going to work for 10 hours, you should opt for a chainsaw.
@@mnight207 start somewhere. Small Business Administration will give you a loan if you make it a biz. Buy tools at auctions or yard sales. Put away a few bucks every paycheck..."how bad do you want it"...
I only use these now after a chainsaw went through my face and neck and killed me in 2019. 13 years of chainsaw experience. Not worth there advantages to me anymore. Saws all will do it!!
@@johngardeajr.1425 hey the whole thing was a joke I felt like saying that back then lol. I own a couple of high quality Makita drills and a camping chainsaw that's all lol so
@potatotiel switching ecosystems is the problem. I started with a second hand Makita blower, charger and a 3 amp battery. Now all of my tools are Makita including a good quality Chinese impact wrench that is compatible with mekita batteries and a mini chainsaw. Android to iOS or iOS to Android.