Well, start by tossing most of the blades you have been talking about. Keep in mind that this is just an opinion
I used the TriMaster for years. Very smooth cut...on some woods....some of the softer woods would be hard to cut straight. Still, it was the best overall for most hard woods. Some cut easy, some cut slow. I hated to cut bubinga or ovangkol with it, took forever.
Now they have come out with the Woodmaster CT in a 1" width so it will fit my saw. After talking with a few folks and looking at photos of the blade. I sprung for 5 of them (cut the cost from $112 down to $78 each that way). My resawing world has changed. I enjoy it, it is relaxing, and effortless. Bubinga and ovangkol slide through that blade with ease. And for the most part, the cut is as smooth as the TriMaster.
The problem with the TriMaster? Too many teeth and the gullets too small to clear as they should. Plus the rake angle of the teeth is not optimized for wood (it IS a metal cutting blade). That blade was overheating. Coco and a lot of other woods would build up deposits on the blade and in the gullets. And the overheating eventually caused slight warping in the band. It started wandering well before it started to dull. I don't think any of my TriMasters actually got dull. They just got to where they would no longer cut straight.
The Woodmaster? Cuts at a good rate regardless of the wood, though I do not feed overly fast, just keep very light feed pressure. The gullets do not plug. The blade stays very clean, even after several cocobolo billets in a row. Maybe not the thinnest kerf, but reasonable. And, more important, very consistent.
I don't try to cut overly thin. I resaw sides at about .12, on the average, and always get 6 slices from anything that is 15/16 or so thick. If it is a slightly heavy 1", I get the 6 slices plus a "veneer". The uniformity of the "veneer" tells me how consistent the cuts are.
I initially wondered about the longevity of this blade. But I am on the first one and it is cutting just like when I first put it on the saw. And I have a stack of both backs and sides over 2 feet tall of each. And most of it is dense tropical hardwoods including some real bears like pau rosa.
I have a brand new TriMaster, still in the box. And it will probably stay there. As for using non-carbide blades? Not worth the bother and they don't last. If I were to use them and replace them before the ruined some expensive wood, I would end up paying at least twice as much in blades as the Woodmaster.
I am a VERY happy resawer
That's my story and I'm sticking with it.
Grant