The most common question we get from new Ciklek customers: how often should I be sharpening?
The honest answer is that it depends on what you’re cutting. Carbide wears at dramatically different rates depending on material composition, moisture content, adhesives, and feed rate. But there are solid empirical guidelines, and following them is the difference between a tooling program that pays for itself and one that doesn’t.
The Key Variables
Carbide grade. Not all carbide is equal. Higher cobalt content = tougher but softer. Lower cobalt = harder but more brittle. The wrong carbide for your material wears faster and chips more.
Material hardness. Jatoba and hard maple eat carbide. Poplar and soft maple are gentle. MDF falls in the middle but contains silica in the binder that acts like fine sandpaper.
Adhesives and coatings. Melamine, HPL, and veneer-core plywood all have adhesives that accelerate wear. Pre-finished stock is especially hard on edges.
Feed rate. Faster feed = more material removed per tooth pass = faster wear. Running the same blade at different feed rates produces dramatically different lifespans.
Blade geometry. Hook angle, tooth count, and grind style affect both cut quality and wear rate. A high-ATB blade on hardwood lasts longer than a flat-top on the same material.
Sharpening Intervals by Material
| Material | Sharpening interval |
|---|---|
| Softwood (pine, fir, spruce) | Every 40–60 hrs cutting |
| Poplar, soft maple, alder | Every 30–50 hrs cutting |
| Hard maple, cherry, walnut | Every 20–35 hrs cutting |
| Jatoba, ipe, teak, exotic hardwoods | Every 10–20 hrs cutting |
| Baltic birch plywood | Every 30–45 hrs cutting |
| Melamine / HPL | Every 15–25 hrs cutting |
| MDF / particleboard | Every 25–40 hrs cutting |
| Pre-finished stock | Every 10–20 hrs cutting |
Hours here refer to actual blade run time, not shop hours.
The Problem with Hours
Most shops don’t track blade hours. They track “it looks dull” or “we’re getting tearout.” By that point, the blade has been underperforming for a while.
A better proxy: sheets per cycle. It’s easy to count.
| Material | Sheets before sharpening |
|---|---|
| ¾” maple plywood | 250–400 sheets |
| ¾” melamine | 150–250 sheets |
| ¾” MDF | 300–500 sheets |
| Solid hardwood (linear feet ÷ 8) | 80–120 “sheet equivalents” |
Warning Signs You’ve Waited Too Long
- Feed resistance increases (you’re pushing harder)
- Burning on rip cuts, especially in hardwood
- Tearout appears on the underside of crosscuts
- Saw motor sounds different (higher pitch, more load)
- Cut edges have a slight glaze instead of clean fiber separation
If you’re seeing any of these, the blade should have come out a week ago.
Setting Up a Schedule That Actually Works
The simplest system: count sheets. Pick a sheet count target below your “dull” threshold and pull the blade at that number regardless of how it looks.
Example: If you run 400 sheets before your melamine blade shows problems, set your pull cycle at 300 sheets. You’ll never be cutting with a dull blade again.
That’s the core of proactive tooling management. The hard part is actually tracking it. A tally mark on a whiteboard works. A spreadsheet works. A managed service that does it for you works even better.
Ciklek sets a custom pull schedule for every blade based on your materials and volume — and pulls it before it causes problems, not after.