Well Sawdust 703, I'll tell you all about it and show a picture of why.
I was making some boxes for my granddaughters (3 of them) and I used a full 2" thick piece of cherry wood for them.
When you are cutting the center out and separating the inner wall from the outer wall on something like this, you can't very well stop and change blades in mid cut.
Not to mention that cherry wood is very prone to burning.
So, I just had to slow down every so often (when it started smoking) and let things cool down, back up and try to get rid of the sawdust and go back at it. It took a new blade (#10 7 TPI) for each cut but, I made it.
It is NOT something that I would recommend nor would I do it again but, it is what it is (or was what it was).
There was a bunch of clean up on the wood from all the burning too.
Yea, and I'm cheap too but, that wasn't the reason I ruined nine blades and did something that seems so foolish now.
Rog