Industrial Knives for Woodworking
and Panel Processing

Made-to-print or sample-matched knives engineered to reduce tear-out, burn marks, and chipping—across hardwood, softwood, MDF, and veneer.

Wood Cutting Is Surface-Quality Driven

Woodworking knives are judged by the surface they leave behind. Common problems—tear-out, fuzzy grain, burning, resin buildup, and edge chipping—often trace back to a mismatch between cutter geometry, edge preparation, and the material being processed (hardwood vs softwood vs engineered panels). 

Davion supports woodworking operations with knives engineered for: 

About Davion Manufacturing

What We Supply for Woodworking

Common woodworking knife formats:

Support options (as required):

For straight-knife fundamentals, see Straight Blades. For made-to-print across any geometry, see Custom Blades. 

Typical Woodworking Operations We Support

Planing and Surfacing

Set matching and edge stability are key to consistent finish and reduced snipe/defects.

Profile accuracy and edge condition directly affect part geometry and surface texture.

Durability and chipping resistance dominate due to impact and contamination.

Veneer is sensitive to tear and splintering; engineered panels are abrasive and wear edges quickly. 

Typical Converting Operations We Support​

Wood Cutting & Processing Blades

Clean Cuts in Solid Wood, Panels, and Composites

Woodworking applications require blades that balance sharpness, durability, and resistance to abrasive materials like MDF and particleboard. Poor blade performance leads to tear-out, chipping, and inconsistent edges. We supply blades matched to your material type and cutting operation for stable, repeatable results.

Request a Woodworking Blade Quote

Share your material, machine type, or cutting method—we’ll match the right blade setup.
Planer Blades   Chipper Knives  Circular Blades  Profile Knives  | Veneer Blades
Focused on clean edges, durability, and consistent cutting.

Applications & Variants (Blade Styles & Options)

Planer Knife Sets (Straight Knives)

What it is: Straight knives supplied as matched sets for planer cutterheads.

When used: Surface planing where finish quality depends on consistent knife height and edge condition.

Joiner / Jointer Knives (Set-Based)

What it is: Straight knives for jointer heads used to flatten/true boards.

When used: When clean edges and flatness depend on stable, matched knives.

Moulder Profile Knives (Custom Geometry)

What it is: Profiled knives that create a specific moulding shape.

When used: When dimensional profile and surface finish must be consistent at production rates.

Insert-Style Profile Knife Elements (Station-Defined)

What it is: Replaceable cutting inserts used in certain profiling systems.

When used: When minimizing downtime through quick replacement is a priority.

Chipper Knives (Heavy-Duty)

What it is: Robust knives used in chippers for wood waste processing.

When used: When impact resistance and stable edge life dominate.

Hogger / Grinder Pre-Cut Knives (Application-Defined)

What it is: Knives used in pre-processing stages to control feed into grinders.

When used: When consistent feed and reduced load spikes matter.

Veneer Guillotine Knives

What it is: Straight knives used to shear veneer sheets cleanly.

When used: Veneer processing where tear-out and splintering must be minimized.

Veneer Clipping Knives

What it is: Knives used for clipping veneer edges and sizing sheets.

When used: When clean veneer edges improve layup and downstream appearance.

Panel Trimming Knives (MDF/Particleboard)

What it is: Trimming knives used on engineered panels.

When used: When edge quality matters and abrasive wear is high.

Laminated Panel Trim Knives

What it is: Knives selected to cut laminated surfaces without chipping the laminate layer.

When used: Furniture and cabinetry panels where surface chipping is unacceptable.

Edge Banding Trim Knives (Station-Defined)

What it is: Knives used to flush-trim edge banding material.

When used: When trim quality affects assembly aesthetics and fit.

Paper Wrap / Foil Wrap Trimming Blades

What it is: Trimming blades used in profile wrapping and decorative film operations.

When used: When thin decorative layers require clean trimming without tearing.

Matched Knife Sets for Cutterheads (Set-Level Repeatability)

What it is: Knife sets controlled for consistent geometry across all positions.

When used: When uneven finish or vibration indicates mismatch within the set.

Anti-Resin Buildup Knife Options (Surface Strategy)

What it is: Material/finish strategies aimed at reducing resin pitch accumulation.

When used: Resinous woods where buildup causes heating and surface defects.

Tear-Out Control Edge Geometry (Spec-Driven)

What it is: Edge prep and geometry selected to reduce tear-out on difficult grain.

When used: Hardwood and figured grain where surface finish defects dominate.

Wear-Focused Knives for Engineered Wood (Abrasive Duty)

What it is: Material selections biased toward abrasion resistance.

When used: MDF, particleboard, OSB, and composite panels that dull edges quickly.

Toughness-Focused Knives for Contamination Risk

What it is: Specifications tuned to resist chipping from knots, fasteners, or debris.

When used: Reclaimed wood streams or operations with higher inclusion risk.

Build-to-Sample Woodworking Knives

What it is: Replacement knives replicated from existing parts when drawings aren’t available.

When used: Legacy machines or OEM knives without accessible documentation.

Materials, Heat Treat & Coatings (Brief + Cross-Links)

Woodworking knives are typically limited by wear (dulling), edge chipping, and resin buildup, especially in engineered wood. 

Carbon & tool steels

Common base for many woodworking knife duties. → Materials: Carbon & Tool Steels

Carbide (select applications)

For high-wear engineered woods where justified (application dependent). → Materials: Carbide

Coatings & surface treatments

Can support wear reduction or lower friction in certain cases (application dependent). → Coatings & Surface Treatments

Heat treatment & hardness

Tuned to balance edge holding and chipping resistance. → Heat Treatment & Hardness

Stainless steels

Used only when corrosion exposure dominates (application-defined). → Materials: Stainless Steels

Materials, Heat Treat & Coatings

Quality & Inspection (No Fake Certs)

Surface quality depends on repeatable geometry. Inspection scope can be aligned to set-level performance: 

Quality options can include:

If your issue is surface finish, include photos of the defect (tear-out, burn, chatter) and the wood type—this speeds up correct specification. 

Quality & Inspection

Typical Applications — Industries Mapping

Woodworking knives are used across: 

Hardwood/softwood planing and moulding

Veneer production and clipping

Engineered panels (MDF, particleboard, OSB)

Furniture and cabinetry finishing operations

Wood waste chipping and size reduction

What We Need From You to Quote (Checklist)

Woodworking quotes are fastest when we know the material and the defect you’re trying to eliminate. Provide what you have: 

Files & geometry

Machine/station details

Material being cut

Performance targets / failure mode

Commercial & documentation

Checklist

Prototyping, Repeat Orders & Lead Time

Prototype sets

Validate finish quality and wear behavior before scaling.

Repeat orders

Controlled revisions to maintain geometry and set matching.

Typical lead time

[LEAD TIME] (depends on material, heat treat, finishing, and inspection scope).

Minimum order quantity

[MOQ] (sets can start small; volume improves pricing).

Request a Quote

Send your knife drawing or sample and tell us the wood type and defect you’re seeing. We’ll scope a quote aligned to finish quality and uptime. 

Frequently Asked Questions

Why do woodworking knives cause tear-out?

Tear-out often comes from grain direction variability, edge geometry mismatch, dull edges, or feed/speed interactions. Edge prep and geometry selection are common levers. 

Burning is frequently linked to friction and heat from dull edges, resin buildup, or incorrect cutting conditions. Knife surface condition and maintenance cycles matter. 

Often yes. MDF and particleboard are abrasive and can dull edges quickly, so wear-focused material strategies may be needed. 

Yes. Set-level consistency is important for surface finish and vibration control. Provide the set count and any critical height/fit requirements. 
 

profile drawing (DXF/STEP) plus critical dimensions and datum references is ideal. If you have an existing knife, a sample can speed matching. 

Yes—send a sample or provide clear photos and measurements. Build-to-sample replacements are supported with controlled revisions for reorders.

Buildup is driven by wood chemistry, temperature, and surface condition. Material/finish strategy and maintenance practices are typical levers. 

Knife geometry (files), machine/station type, wood/panel type, and the defect you’re trying to eliminate (tear-out, burn, chipping).