Multi Tool Blade – Coarse Wood – Japanese Teeth
From £1.79£2.15 EX VATINC VAT
Coarse cut multi tool blades designed for quick, aggressive cuts through wood, plasterboard and many plastics. Japanese-style teeth give a fast, grabby cut. Available in 32mm, 44mm and 68mm. Quick release fitment for easy swapping.
| Size | Price | QTY |
|---|---|---|
| 32mm | £1.79£2.15 | |
| 44mm | £1.99£2.39 | |
| 68mm | £2.29£2.75 |
A coarse wood multi tool blade sounds simple enough, and honestly it is — but picking the right tooth pattern makes a real difference to how fast you get through a job. These blades use Japanese-style teeth, which are ground to cut aggressively on the pull stroke. The result is a faster, more efficient cut through timber, plasterboard and most types of plastic than you’d get from a standard bi-metal blade sitting in the back of the van.
Available in three widths — 32mm, 44mm and 68mm — there’s a size here for most cutting situations. The narrow 32mm blade suits tighter access and detailed cuts, the 44mm is a solid all-rounder, and the 68mm gives you the reach when you’re cutting across wider sections of timber or sheet material. The quick release fitment means you’re not hunting around for a key or a coin to swap blades mid-job, which adds up when you’re doing a lot of cuts in a day.
Where Coarse Wood Multi Tool Blades Get Used
These blades are used daily by joiners, first fixers, plumbers and general builders — anyone who needs to get into tight corners that a jigsaw or circular saw simply can’t reach. Door frames, subfloors, skirting boards, stud walls, boxing in pipework — the multi tool earns its place on site precisely because it can do the fiddly stuff cleanly and quickly. Plasterboard is where the coarse tooth pattern really shines. It cuts fast and doesn’t clog, which is exactly what you want when you’re cutting in back boxes or notching out for cables.
Japanese Tooth Pattern
The Japanese-style teeth are impulse-hardened, meaning they hold their edge longer than standard ground teeth under normal use. They’re not indestructible — hit a screw or a nail and you’ll know about it — but on clean timber and board material they’ll see a good number of cuts before they start to drag. At this price point, they’re straightforwardly good value as a working consumable rather than something you’re trying to nurse along.
The quick release fitment is compatible with the standard universal shank used by most major multi tool brands, so there’s no faff around compatibility for the vast majority of tools on site. Grab a few across the sizes and keep them in the tool bag. You’ll use them.
Pro Tip: When cutting plasterboard, let the blade do the work at a steady pace rather than forcing it — rushing causes the teeth to skip and tear the paper face, which makes a mess of any plastered finish behind it.








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