How to Choose the Right SAWZALL Blade 

By Robert Robillard on Tool Reviews

The Ultimate Milwaukee SAWZALL Blade Guide: 

If you’ve ever stood in the tool aisle staring at a wall of red-and-white packaging, you know that picking a reciprocating “Sawzall” saw blade isn’t as simple as it used to be.

I’m old enough to remember fighting cuts with multiple bi-metal blades! ~ Rob

Milwaukee has revolutionized the category by moving away from “one-size-fits-all” blades and toward specialized, high-performance carbide. We recently sat down with Milwaukee NITRUS™ AX™ Product Manager, Joe Stehlik, to discuss the engineering behind the latest lineup. We talked about the new NITRUS™ AX™, how to choose the right NITRUS™ blade, and—more importantly—the science of why they work.

The NITRUS AX: Why It’s the “Apex Predator” of Wood

While the Milwaukee WRECKER™ and TORCH™ reciprocating blades have their place, the NITRUS™ AX™ blade is engineered for a specific nightmare: heavy-duty demolition of nail-embedded wood. Standard carbide blades often fail due to “impact shock”—the sudden jar of hitting a hardened fastener. The AX™ is built to thrive in that environment.

The Engineering Secrets of the AX:

  • “Turned-Out” Tooth Design: The AX features a more aggressive set than many other blades. This creates a larger kerf (cut width), preventing the blade from pinching and allowing for lightning-fast material removal.
  • 5 TPI with Massive Gullets: The low tooth count creates deep “valleys” that act as an exhaust system, clearing wood chips and debris so the blade doesn’t choke or overheat.
  • Fang Tip™: Most blades “skate” across a surface when starting. The Fang Tip™ bites into the wood instantly, making it the superior choice for aggressive plunge cutting.
  • Nail Guard™: A tiny “bump” at the end of each tooth prevents nails from dropping between the teeth and shearing them off. It deflects the impact, protecting the carbide tips.

The “NITRUS™ Science: Welding vs. Brazing

The real durability of the AX™ comes from how the teeth are attached.

  • The Old Way (Brazing): Teeth are essentially “soldered” on. High heat can cause them to “pop” off like bottle caps.
  • The Milwaukee Way (High-Energy Welding): The NITRUS™ AX uses a metallurgical bond, fusing the carbide into the steel body. This ensures teeth stay attached even when hitting Grade 8 bolts or hardened deck screws.

The NITRUS Family Comparison

Feature NITRUS™ AX™ NITRUS™ WRECKER™ NITRUS™ TORCH™
Primary Material Nail-Embedded Wood Multi-Material / Mixed Demo Heavy Metal / Cast Iron
TPI 5 TPI (Aggressive) 6 TPI (Versatile) 7-8 TPI (Rigid)
Best For… Demolition, Roofing, Framing & Stud Walls Versatility. Anything from wood with fasteners to thick metals. Pipe, Rebar, & Angle Iron
The “Secret Sauce” Fang Tip™ & Nail Guard™. Unique tooth design focused on durability/ 6TPI Tooth Design & Heat-Dissipating Blend 8TPI Tooth Design & Unique Carbide Blend

Application Guide: Which Blade to Grab?

  1. The AX (The Nail-Embedded Wood Specialist)

Grab this for framing, rough-in work, or tearing down a stud wall. Its massive teeth and “turned-out” stance make it the fastest wood-cutter in the world.

Pro Tip: Best for demolition and nail-embedded wood. Do not use this for thick metal; the large teeth will catch and cause violent vibration.

  1. The WRECKER (The Demo Generalist)

The “One Blade” solution. Grab this for “blind” demolition where you don’t know what’s behind the wall. It transitions seamlessly from wood studs to copper pipes and galvanized nails.

Pro Tip: It’s not the fastest in pure wood (AX™ wins) or the cleanest in metal (Torch wins).

  1. The TORCH (The Metal Specialist)

The “Tank” of the lineup. Grab this for 4″ cast iron stacks, rebar, or thick-wall conduit. The Grid Iron™ honeycomb pattern embossed in the steel makes it the stiffest blade Milwaukee makes.The stiffer blade design keeps cuts straight in the thickest metals.

Pro Tip: Using this on wood will be painfully slow and will likely cause the blade to smoke as the small teeth clog with sawdust.

The “4-vs-1” Value Strategy

A single NITRUS™ AX™ blade typically costs around $16.97. While a standard bi-metal blade is much cheaper, the ROI (Return on Investment) favors Nitrus:

  • Durability: 50x to 100x the life of bi-metal.
  • Efficiency: One NITRUS™ blade can outlast dozens of cheap blades, saving you from stopping your work three times to change a dull blade.
  • Integrity: The 1″ tall body and thicker backer makes the blade stiffer. This design allows it to hold up in more aggressive demolition.

Launch & Availability (2026)

  • April: 9″ industry-standard lengths (the “sweet spot” for framing).
  • July: 6″ (tight spaces) and 12″ (deep-reach structural) lengths hit shelves.
  • Options: Available in 1-pk, 3-pk, and 5-pk configuration

 

 

 

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed!

About the author

Robert Robillard

Carpenter / Remodeler / Editor

Rob Robillard is “The Concord Carpenter” Rob is a builder, general contractor, carpenter, woodworker, and editor of Concord Carpenter As a General Contractor and carpenter, Rob owns and operates Concord Carpenter LLC. A full-service remodeling and construction company. Rob is a recognized leader in home building best practices and a source for how-to information for building professionals. On this website, Rob covers all aspects of home construction, building science, home improvement, woodworking, remodeling, and some of the best product and tool reviews. Rob is in charge of our Tool and Product Review series - Concord Carpenter Videos where we post all of our tool reviews and video tutorials. Rob approaches remodeling and building construction with a pragmatic and problem-solving approach. He enjoys using his knowledge and experience to help and educate building professionals as well as DIYers on best practices in the construction and remodeling industry. He's a strong advocate for "raising the bar" in the construction trades and promoting the trades to youth. #BeAMentor #Green2Great Craftsmanship, quality, and pride guide his journey on this channel The Concord Carpenter's motto: "Well done is better than well said!" : Read more about Rob

All posts by Robert »

© Copyright 2019 A Concord Carpenter · All Rights Reserved