Safety January 7, 2026 · 6 min read

When a Saw Blade Becomes a Safety Hazard: The Carbide Tip Risk Most Shops Ignore

A carbide tip ejected at 4,000 RPM travels at over 200 mph. Most shops have no idea how close their blades are to that failure point.

In twenty years of working around woodworking shops, the safety conversation is almost always about guards, push sticks, and kickback prevention. These matter. But there’s a failure mode that gets almost no attention — and it’s potentially more dangerous than any of them.

Carbide tip ejection.

What Happens When a Tip Lets Go

A 10” saw blade running at 4,000 RPM has tip speeds approaching 120 mph. The carbide teeth are brazed onto the steel plate — held by a joint that, when new, is extremely strong. But brazing joints fatigue. Over hundreds of cycles, microscopic cracks propagate through the braze material.

When the joint fails, the tip separates. At operating speed, it becomes a projectile with roughly the mass of a small bolt and the velocity of a speeding car.

OSHA records document tip ejection incidents causing:

  • Penetrating eye injuries (frequently catastrophic)
  • Facial lacerations requiring reconstructive surgery
  • Hand and arm penetration wounds
  • One confirmed fatality in a production woodworking environment

This is not theoretical. It happens, and it happens in shops that consider themselves safety-conscious.

The Risk Factors No One Talks About

Excessive resharpening cycles. Every sharpening removes a small amount of carbide. The tooth profile changes. Eventually, the geometry concentrates stress at the braze joint in ways the original design didn’t account for. Most manufacturers specify a maximum number of sharpening cycles — very few shops track this.

Incorrect grinding. A sharpening shop that uses the wrong wheel, wrong speed, or wrong coolant can heat the carbide tip enough to weaken the braze joint. The blade looks sharp. The joint is compromised. You won’t know until it fails.

Impact damage. A blade that’s been hit — by a nail, a screw, or a hardened inclusion in the wood — can have a cracked tip that’s invisible to the naked eye. Running that blade is gambling.

Age and corrosion. Rust on the plate near the braze joint is a warning sign. So is any visible gap or discoloration around a tooth.

What a Proper Inspection Looks Like

Before any blade goes back into service — whether new or freshly sharpened — a proper inspection should include:

  1. Visual inspection of every tooth under magnification for cracks, chips, or braze gap
  2. Hook angle verification against the spec (off-spec grinding concentrates stress)
  3. Plate inspection for cracks, warping, or expansion slots that have grown
  4. Cycle count check against manufacturer’s recommended retirement cycle

Most shops do none of this. A shop manager eyeballs the blade, decides it looks okay, and runs it.

When to Retire Without Question

Retire the blade — don’t sharpen it — when:

  • Any carbide tip shows a visible crack or chip
  • The blade has exceeded the manufacturer’s cycle count
  • There’s any gap or movement at a braze joint
  • The plate shows a crack anywhere, especially near a gullet
  • The blade has been involved in a kickback event or major impact

These are not judgment calls. The answer is always the same: retire.

The Management Problem

The safety risk from carbide tip ejection is directly tied to information — specifically, whether anyone knows how many times a blade has been sharpened, by whom, using what process.

In a shop with no tracking, that information simply doesn’t exist. Blades circulate until they’re replaced, with no record of what happened in between.

That’s the gap a managed program closes. Not just for efficiency — for safety.

Every blade in the Ciklek program has a documented cycle count, sharpening history, and inspection record. We flag blades for retirement before they become hazards.

See what this means for your shop

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