Hi Master. Hmm good question. The naming & function of saws is not clear to me & my own experience sawing in the mill is quite limited.
In KBC catalog they use this naming:
- Plain Slitting Saw (lower teeth count, thickness starts about 1/32" = .032" to 1/8" depending on dia)
- Jeweler Slotting Saw (high teeth count, thin blades starting at 0.008" to about 0.128" depending on dia)
- Screw Slotting Saw (in-between-ish teeth count?, thin blades starting at 0.008" to 0.182" depending on dia)
On my 6061 heads I used a jeweler saw, 3" diameter, 168 teeth.
https://www.kbctools.ca/itemdetail/5-746-565
I'm actually not sure if cutting aluminum over steel is easier, worse or about the same. On one hand, aluminum is softer so one would think a bit more aggressive feed. But OTOH the gummy nature makes it harder to clear chips. I had too much time in the heads by that stage so I elected more conservative shallower depth of cut & more passes. I seem to recall 0.020-0.025" DOC ~ 350-400 rpm, but I can check. Some folks advocate a shallow guide slot, then cut full depth. Personally I would test this theory a bunch of times before the real deal.
Back to your master rod, where the 4 link rod bottom ends pre-installed on the master rod & shimmied in the entire cluster? I haven't gotten that far myself but its got me wondering. I think my crank case has a narrower opening than the Edwards. In my mind I was already thinking I will have to feed the link rods in through the cylinder holes.