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Tiger Tooth Saw Blades
MHE is proud to be a distributor for US Saws, "Tiger Tooth" blades. If you haven't seen or used one yet, you are in for a pleasant surprise!
The "Tiger Tooth" blade easily cut through 7/8" thick cast iron in approximately 1-minute
The blade pictured above is a 14" Tiger
Tooth blade (manufactured by U.S.
Saws, Inc.) Combined with the incredible power of a Stanley
CO25, hydraulic cut-off saw, the results are impressive, to say the least!
Specs
14" "Tiger Tooth" Super Grit Diamond
Blade The "Tiger Tooth" is a vaccuum-brazed, electroplated, "step
segment" blade with oversized diamond-grit & wear-resistant swirled
sides. It is designed to cut all materials:
- Cast Iron
- Ductile Iron
- Concrete
- Reinforced Concrete
- Clay
- Aluminum
- Steel
- Copper
- Wood
- PVC
- Etc
It is ideal for emergency fast cutting use and multi-use
situations.
Stanley CO25 Cut-Off Saw with "Tiger Tooth" blade
And here's some information about the Stanley CO25 Hydraulic Cut-Off
Saw
Lightweight (approx 25lbs with blade) and powerful, the Stanley
CO25 Cutoff Saw (p/n# 205541) is ideal for cutting concrete, masonry,
pipe, structural steel beams and guardrail. The CO25 can be used with
readily available 14 inch abrasive or wet and dry diamond blades.
Available Handle Extension Kit (p/n# 34175) provides for upright operation
to meet operator preference
The CO25 is a 9-Horsepower tool! Only hydraulic tools can put that kind of power into your hands. No other tool even comes close!
All (current) HIPPO products allow an operator to use a hydraulic saw AND another tool (such as a trash pump, or a generator)
at the same time!
Click on the image to see the Tiger-Tooth blade on a Stanley CO25 saw, in action!
One bad saw-blade!
Why should you care about any of this?
We found out from the guys at MLGW that they had recently tried to
cut a section of pipe just like this, but it had taken them nearly
6-hours, and they went through 4 (gas powered) saws doing it. The
guys were choking and gagging on fumes the entire time, and they had
to constantly worry about getting the saw in the water. The ironic
thing is that they have hydraulic power, they have a Stanley CO25
cut-off saw, and they had that blade! They didn't have to suffer like
that!
- Hydraulic tools don't produce any fumes. They could run that saw in a coat closet and not be affected by fumes!
- Hydraulic tools don't mind the water. The CO25 cut-off saw can be operated in and even under water.
- Power! Once again, generally speaking, the majority of hydraulic tools are 9-HP tools! Compare that to the biggest, baddest, gas-powered quickie saw (Stihl TS 800), which only has 6.7-HP
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