How to Choose a Diamond Blade for Concrete, Stone and Asphalt
This diamond blade selection guide addresses the problem every contractor faces: switching blades three times before lunch. Each swap stops the crew. The problem is not the blade price. It is the blade type matched to the material. This guide covers the four decisions that determine whether a blade cuts all day or dies before noon: material, rim type, bond hardness, and blade specifications.
How Each Material Wears a Diamond Blade
Concrete contains hard aggregate such as quartz, basalt, and granite chips. Cutting produces fine abrasive dust that erodes the metal bond matrix holding diamond grit. Aggregate hardness varies by region. A concrete blade requires a hard metal bond to resist this erosion long enough for diamond grit to fracture and expose fresh cutting edges. If the bond is too soft, the matrix erodes faster than diamond can cut and segment life drops sharply.
Granite ranks 6-7 on the Mohs hardness scale and demands a soft metal bond. Marble and limestone score 3-4 Mohs, meaning low abrasiveness, so a hard bond prevents premature segment erosion. Sandstone falls between, varying by quartz content.
Asphalt is aggregate bound in bitumen. Bitumen softens at cutting temperature and clogs diamond segments when gullets are too narrow. Asphalt blades need wider gullets and a softer bond than concrete blades. Running a concrete blade on asphalt overheats segments and bakes bitumen onto the diamond surface. Once coated, cutting stops until the blade is dressed.
Green concrete (cured less than 48 hours) contains free silica and moisture that produce an extremely abrasive slurry. Green concrete blades use an extra-hard bond and wider gullets. Never use a green concrete blade on cured concrete. The hard bond glazes. Never use a standard concrete blade on green concrete. Segment life drops sharply. Clay brick and concrete block are moderately abrasive and standard segmented blades handle them. Refractory brick requires a hard bond with high diamond concentration.
Rim Types and When to Use Each
Segmented blades have gaps (gullets) between diamond segments that cool the blade, eject debris, and prevent segment loading. They tolerate the highest temperatures and are the default for cured concrete, asphalt, and clay brick. Larger diameters carry more segments. More segments produce a smoother but slower cut.
Turbo blades have a continuous rim with serrated edges that create small channels for cooling. They are the best single-blade choice for contractors cutting multiple materials in one day.
Continuous rim blades have a solid diamond-impregnated band with zero gaps. They cut the slowest, generate the most heat, and produce the best edge quality. Use them for ceramic tile, porcelain, marble slabs, and granite countertops. Never run a continuous rim blade on thick concrete. It will overheat in under a minute. Continuous rim blades demand water cooling for every cut.
Browse Yuanhe diamond saw blades for segmented, turbo, and continuous rim options.
Bond Hardness. The Rule That Prevents Glazing
The metal bond holds diamond grit in the segment. It is a sintered powder metal compound of iron, copper, cobalt, tin, and tungsten carbide. As the blade cuts, the bond wears at a controlled rate to expose fresh diamond. When this rate is wrong, the blade stops cutting or wears out prematurely.
Hard Material → Soft Bond
Granite and hard aggregate concrete wear a soft bond quickly, continuously exposing diamond at the correct rate.
Soft Material → Hard Bond
Limestone, marble, green concrete, and asphalt do not wear the bond fast enough. A hard bond prevents premature erosion.
Glazing (Bond Too Hard)
Diamond grit rounds off without fracturing. Segment surface polishes to a shine. Cutting stops. Fix: Dress the blade by cutting abrasive block. If glazing returns, switch to a softer bond.
Rapid Wear (Bond Too Soft)
Matrix erodes before diamond finishes cutting. Grit falls out unused. Fix: Switch to a harder bond blade. Dressing cannot fix a bond that is too soft.
Segment Specifications and Blade Sizing
Segment height determines remaining blade life. Replace blades before segment height reaches the minimum safe threshold. Steel-on-material contact burns the core and can throw segments. Segment width determines kerf width. Asphalt blades run wider for debris clearance. Tile blades run narrower for minimal material loss.
Diamond concentration, measured in carats per unit volume of segment, extends blade life in abrasive materials like refractory and green concrete. Grit size ranges from coarse (fast cutting, rough finish) to fine (slow cutting, smooth finish). Concrete blades use coarser grit. Stone blades use medium grit. Tile blades use fine grit for chip-free edges.
Laser welded segments are the standard for professional dry cutting blades. The weld penetrates into the segment-to-core junction. Sintered segments cost less but are wet-cut only. Brazed segments use silver-based filler metal for specialty blades and small diameters.
Blade Diameter, Cutting Depth, and Arbor Size
Always match the blade arbor to the saw shaft. Arbor reducer rings can adapt a larger arbor blade to a smaller shaft but never the reverse. Every diamond blade has a maximum RPM stamped on the body. Match blade RPM rating to saw output RPM and never exceed the lower of the two.
Wet Cutting vs Dry Cutting
Wet Cutting
Extends blade life through segment cooling and suppresses respirable crystalline silica dust at the source. OSHA Table 1 (29 CFR 1926.1153) mandates wet cutting for concrete on most US job sites unless the saw has an integrated HEPA dust collection system rated at 99.97% efficiency.
Dry Cutting
Faster setup but reduces blade life. Requires respiratory protection: N95 minimum for outdoor work, half-face respirator with P100 filters for enclosed spaces. Never run a wet-rated blade dry. If you need both capabilities, choose a dry-rated blade.
Cost Per Cut and When to Dress a Blade
Cost Per Cut = (Blade Cost + Labor for Blade Changes) / Total Linear Feet
For production cutting, cost per foot is the correct metric. A higher-priced blade that lasts through more linear feet costs less per foot than an economy blade requiring multiple replacements.
Dress a glazed blade by cutting into concrete block, common brick, asphalt, or a silicon carbide dressing stone. The abrasive material strips the glazed bond surface, exposing fresh diamond grit. If the blade re-glazes after dressing, switch to a softer bond.
Replace blades when segment height nears the minimum safe threshold, the steel core shows blue discoloration, segments are cracked or missing, or the blade wobbles at rest. A tensioned blade produces a clear sustained ring when tapped. A cracked blade produces a dull thud.
Quick Selection Reference
When Standard Blades Are Not Enough
Standard diamond blades cover common applications. They do not cover custom aggregate mixes, specific segment geometry, non-standard diameters, or blades matched to local aggregate geology. At Yuanhe, we manufacture diamond saw blades to customer specification. You define material type, aggregate hardness, bond formulation, segment height, segment count, gullet geometry, diamond grit size, diamond concentration, blade diameter, arbor size, and core material. We produce the blade. No catalog browsing. No compromise.
OEM Custom Manufacturing. 12,000+ Projects Delivered Across 30+ Countries.
500+ B2B clients. Custom bond formulations, segment dimensions, blade diameters, and core materials.
Frequently Asked Questions
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Yuanhe manufactures diamond saw blades to specification for OEM and industrial buyers. Segmented, turbo, and continuous rim. Custom bond formulations, segment dimensions, blade diameters, and core materials. 500+ B2B clients across 30+ countries. 12,000+ OEM projects delivered.
