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Japanese Pull Saws

Gyokucho Razorsaw 370 vs Suizan Ryoba 270mm

Side-by-side comparison — specs, price, and expert verdict

Gyokucho Razorsaw 370

Gyokucho Razorsaw Dozuki 240mm

Gyokucho · Razorsaw 370

Editor's Choice

$39

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Suizan Ryoba 270mm

Suizan Japanese Ryoba Pull Saw 270mm

Suizan · Ryoba 270mm

$35

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Specs Comparison

SpecificationsGyokucho Razorsaw 370Suizan Ryoba 270mm
Saw Type
Dozuki
Ryoba
Cut Type
Crosscut
Crosscut + Rip (double-edged)
Blade Length
240mm
270mm
TPI
26 TPI
15 / 9 TPI (cross / rip)
Blade Thickness
0.3mm
0.5mm
Back Spine
Handle
Rattan-wrapped wood
Wood (traditional)
Replaceable Blade
Made In
Japan
Japan
Cordless
Price
$39
$35

Which Should You Buy?

Gyokucho Razorsaw 370

The industry standard dozuki. Gyokucho has been making these saws for decades, and the Razorsaw 370 is the model most recommended by woodworking teachers. Impulse-hardened teeth, traditional rattan handle, unbeatable value.

Pros

  • + Best value dozuki on the market
  • + Impulse-hardened teeth for extended life
  • + Replaceable blade — swap in seconds
  • + Traditional rattan-wrapped handle

Cons

  • Less refined fit and finish than Temple Tool
  • Rattan handle may not suit all hands
  • Blade slightly thicker than premium competitors

Suizan Ryoba 270mm

The best entry-level ryoba. Double-edged with crosscut teeth on one side and rip teeth on the other — one saw for all cuts. Suizan's quality punches above its price point, making it the ideal first Japanese saw.

Pros

  • + Double-edged: crosscut + rip in one saw
  • + Excellent value — best ryoba under $40
  • + Thin 0.5mm kerf for minimal waste
  • + Good all-round performer for beginners

Cons

  • No back spine — blade can flex on deep cuts
  • Not as refined as dedicated dozuki for joinery
  • Handle finish is basic

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