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The brochure and video show the blade cutting large nails. I have done a little bit of wood cutting with it and it seems to be holding up. The blade is now worthless.Blade #133 seems to work a little better. Thank you for the opportunity to submit my review on this product.These blades are way over priced for the amount of work you get from them.Blade #152 is a wood-metal blade and advertized as able to cut nails. I tried this and after 3 nails the blade was no longer any good. I'm almost affraid to use it too much because I would not want to rush out and buy a new one right a way.Way too expensive.Neil Chehalis, WA No more teeth on the blade.Blade # 127 lost all the teeth after just 3 plunge cuts into a wood 2x4.
I bought replacement blades for my husband MultiMaster Fein tool, he loves this tool, the replacements came fast.
Less then a minute, Yes, 60 seconds and vertually no pressure. YES, I follwed the directions on how to attach and to use the attachment. So now I have a $50 plus piece of scrap. I've tried to use this nine times on trim. I've used the machine for cutting drywall, plaster, soft wood, plastic, very light metal- aluminum. Due to the vibration the sandpaper is being cut at the retainer clip. The Fein Multimaster FMM250Q as sold and I purchased from the television commercial is fine.
The idea of it is great, but design needs improvment. The last time attempted the head over heated so bad it melted the plastic clip, the springs fell out and burned my thumb when removing it. The profile kit tool for sanding trim. The bi metal blade is very short lived when cutting hard wood, nails or metal lathe. I've found to be NO GOOD. I'm talking a short period of time. NOT LIKE advertised.From what I've read is now the Fein company may discontine making the PIN / screw that holes the blades for this model.
Out of frustration my spouse was ready to throw the whole kit away.
This is really one of the greatest tools I have ever owned. It's clean and controllable. The saw blades are exactly as advertised, and I have cut through wood in a very short time as opposed to handsawing or sable sawing.
The blade was useless after just using it three times (only about 1/2" of teeth remained). The Wood Holz Precision blade (the wide one) with the larger teeth is not acceptable. The first time that I used it, about ten of the teeth broke off, and the next time, another 10-15 teeth broke off. The other blades seem to be durable. I was only cutting douglas fir and there were absolutely no nails in the wood.
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