Below is a universal advice/statement. Not Festool-specific.
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The safety aspect is, that a blade which is heavier (thicker disc), wider or has a bigger diameter, or, in general, was not tested with the saw, may: *)
- damage the saw
- create a safety hazard
This means, as far as the pure mechanical load on the saw goes, anything which is same or lower diameter and has same or lower (disc) thickness and the disc thickness is supported by the blade securing mechanism and has same or lower kerf and has same arbor and is rated to same or higher speed is generally considered safe to use in a rotating tool like a saw.
This is why most professional tools do not limit the user to specific blade diameters but have "up to" stated in documentation. The trick there is those are professional tools which only qualified professionals (are allowed to) use. These professionals are required/expected to be trained/qualified to not use an incompatible/unsafe blade-tool combination. In those case the tool maker is *not* obliged to tell the user how to use the tool - the user is supposed to have formal qualifications for that already in place.
Aand here comes the "issue":
Festool (Makita, Bosch..) sells to BOTH the professional and the consumer markets. Thus *all* their documentation must meet the stricter "consumer market" standards where the tool is expected to be used by a non-trained or at most semi-qualified person. Thus the documentation cannot leave such safety-critical decisions to the user.
Of course, the user may override/ignore the documentation, BUT then Festool cannot be held liable for any consequences. Be they tool damage, or, critically, an injury.
To reiterate. Above is not Festool-specific. This is how *all* the tool makers which span both the consumer and the professional markets are forced to operate. And that is also why Festool cannot allow users on this semi-official forum to propagate non-approved/tested tool use. Such advice being tolerated here could be construed as "being encouraged by them" in common law .. with all the legal consequences.
For my own: I use all kinds of blades in my TSC 55 and other saws, following the physics limitations mentioned above. BUT, I am a physicist by degree ... so lets say I fall into the "qualified" group on this able to make my own decisions, on my sole responsibility.
Hope helps.
*)Even 0.0001% probability of such meets that "may" and is a no-go for the tool maker vis-a-vis the consumer-focused documentation.
EDIT: Added the that a thinner (disc) blade is not safe also when the blade securing mechanism does not support such thin blades.