Adast Replacement Blades for Paper Cutters

Adast replacement blades provide print shops and paper handling professionals with razor-sharp, durable cutting solutions designed specifically for Adast guillotine and industrial paper cutters. These high-quality blades ensure clean, precise cuts on large volumes of paper, enhancing efficiency and maintaining professional results in busy print environments. Ideal for businesses that require consistent, reliable performance, Adast blades are crafted to fit perfectly and withstand heavy use, reducing downtime and improving productivity. At MyBinding.com, customers benefit from a wide selection of genuine Adast replacement knives, competitive pricing, and fast shipping, making it easy to keep your cutting equipment in optimal condition. Trust MyBinding.com for premium blades that help you achieve smooth, accurate cuts every time, supporting your print shop's success with dependable, long-lasting paper cutter knives.

Adast Replacement Blades for Paper Cutters

Adast replacement blades provide print shops and paper handling professionals with razor-sharp, durable cutting solutions designed specifically for Adast guillotine and industrial paper cutters. These high-quality blades ensure clean, precise cuts on large volumes of...

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MyBinding

Item#: JH-42150

$481.85

features

  • Material: Standard Inlay
  • Holes: 16
  • Length: 37.795"
  • Width: 5.512"
$481.85

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Frequently Asked Questions

Begin with the exact cutter model, then match the blade length, width, thickness, mounting hole pattern, and bevel. A blade that looks close can still seat incorrectly or travel through the cutting path at the wrong angle. Keep the machine nameplate, operating manual, and measurements from the removed blade together when ordering. The broader range of paper cutter knives for print shops shows why brand and dimensions must be treated as separate compatibility details. Do not rely on cutting length alone. If the machine has been modified or the old blade has been sharpened many times, obtain confirmation from the supplier before installation. Accurate identification protects cut quality, the cutter, and the operator.

A worn blade may leave fuzzy edges, pull the stack, require extra force, or fail to separate the bottom sheets consistently. Before replacing it, make sure the stack is square, the clamp is holding evenly, the machine is not overloaded, and the cutting stick is not deeply grooved. A poor cutting stick can imitate a dull blade because the knife no longer reaches the bottom sheets cleanly. If problems continue across different paper stocks and reasonable stack heights, the blade may need sharpening or replacement. Visible chips, damaged mounting holes, severe corrosion, or a blade that has reached its sharpening limit are stronger reasons to replace it. Record the symptoms and maintenance history so the decision is based on repeated performance rather than one bad cut.

A knife guard is valuable whenever a blade will be removed, transported, stored, sharpened, or installed. The exposed edge remains hazardous even when the cutter itself has built-in safety controls because those controls no longer protect a blade that is outside the machine. A correctly sized option from paper cutter knife guards covers the cutting edge while leaving the blade manageable for trained staff. Confirm guard length before ordering and keep it with the spare blade rather than elsewhere in the facility. Installation and removal should follow the cutter manufacturer’s procedure, using the required lifting tools and protective equipment. A guard supports safer handling, but it does not replace training or proper blade-changing practices.

Blade material affects edge life, sharpening cost, and purchase price. Standard steel may suit lighter or less frequent cutting, while harder inlay materials can be useful where high-volume work or abrasive stocks wear an edge quickly. The best choice depends on the cutter design, approved blade specifications, paper coatings, stock thickness, and how often the blade can be removed for sharpening. Do not select a harder material unless it is offered for the exact machine. A long-lasting edge has little value if the blade geometry or mounting pattern is wrong. Estimate how many cutting cycles occur between service periods, then include sharpening, downtime, and spare blade needs in the decision. The least expensive blade is not always the lowest cost over its usable life.

A spare blade is sensible when the cutter supports daily production, deadlines are tight, or sharpening service requires the installed blade to leave the facility. Keeping one serviceable blade ready allows work to continue while the other is sharpened. The spare must match the approved specifications and should be stored in a guard, labeled with the cutter model, and protected from moisture or impact. After installation, square the stack carefully and make test cuts before processing finished work. Paper cutter jogging blocks can help align stacks without placing hands close to the cutting area. Maintain a simple rotation record for each blade so sharpening history, damage, and remaining service life are clear to every operator.