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Question....? Would a stream of compressed air aimed at the top of the wood at the blade kerf/blade intersection help move the chips through the kerf? Thanks,
I am sure it wouldn't hurt anything, but I doubt it would solve the problem. Things like really good dust collection, brushes for the wheels, cleaning the guides and blade frequently are all very good things and will help keep things working smoothly. Usually less oily woods allow the blade to pull the cut material out fairly easily, and this is not an issue. The trick with oily woods is that they gum up, and are harder to draw out. By slowing down you produce less oily dust per. tooth that is trying to draw it out. This allows the teeth to scrape out that material before it gets beyond the gullet and wedges against the sides of the blade.
The Trimasters I use has a higher TPI (2/3) vs my Woodmasters 1.3 TPI, and this allows it to clear oily wood better (actually the cut almost looks polished most of the time, extreamly smooth and little dust). When cutting softwoods the Woodmasters big gullets and fewer TPI actually does better than the Trimaster (at least for me), because it seems to be able to clean the more furry (maybe a bad description

) material better. Either blade does very well on extramly hard, mildly oily woods (say Ebonies).
Rich