Big Words.
I keep seeing posts to the effect that Sodium Hydroxide (Lye or Oven Cleaner) will degrade Tungsten Carbide cutters. Usually on saw blades, but we could extend this to anything made with tungsten carbide. This would include most of the carbide tipped band saw blades, drills or moulding and router cutter heads.
My question is this:
Is there any definitive scientific proof that Lye or Oven cleaner, (which isn't all that strong a concentration of Lye), actually hurts the carbide tips of a saw blade or other tool containing carbide or is this just a tale that is told because someone told you it was true.
We aren't speaking of anecdotal or empirical proof here, just hard cold scientific facts.
From what I've read in a few minutes of Googling around the internet, unless there is a caustic soda (Lye) concentration of over 40%, it can't actually penetrate the tungsten carbide enough to cause any real measurable harm. I'm not saying that I did any real in-depth research, just a quick half hour of looking at different scientific treatises on the effects.
I keep seeing posts to the effect that Sodium Hydroxide (Lye or Oven Cleaner) will degrade Tungsten Carbide cutters. Usually on saw blades, but we could extend this to anything made with tungsten carbide. This would include most of the carbide tipped band saw blades, drills or moulding and router cutter heads.
My question is this:
Is there any definitive scientific proof that Lye or Oven cleaner, (which isn't all that strong a concentration of Lye), actually hurts the carbide tips of a saw blade or other tool containing carbide or is this just a tale that is told because someone told you it was true.
We aren't speaking of anecdotal or empirical proof here, just hard cold scientific facts.
From what I've read in a few minutes of Googling around the internet, unless there is a caustic soda (Lye) concentration of over 40%, it can't actually penetrate the tungsten carbide enough to cause any real measurable harm. I'm not saying that I did any real in-depth research, just a quick half hour of looking at different scientific treatises on the effects.