Features
- 2 Pcs 2" Rigid Scraper Blades and 2 Pcs 4" Sealant Cutting Blade
- 3 Inch L x 2 Inch W Scraper Blade and 4 Inch L x 0.4 Inch W Tapered Blade ,Stainless Steel Material
- Best for Scraping Removing Cutting Painting Caulk Adhesive Sealant in the Corner and other Tight Area
- Not Compatible with Craftsman Bolt on Models,Bosch MXH180B/GOP40/GOP12V/Starlock, Delwalt 20V, Dremel Multimax MM40/ MM45/MM50/6300, Fein FMM350QSL/Supercut/Starlcok and Black and Decker Matrix
- Compatible with Chicago, Craftsman, Dewalt, Fein Genesis, Harbor Freight, Jobmax, Makita, Milwaukee NEXTEC,Porter Cable, Ridgid, Ryobi, Rockwell, WEN,WORX,Zinsano and More
Specifications
Color | Silver |
Size | Multi Tool Scraper Blade - 4 Pcs |
Unit Count | 4 |
A four-piece set containing two 2-inch rigid stainless steel scraper blades and two 4-inch tapered stainless steel sealant-cutting blades for use with oscillating multi-tools. Designed for scraping and cutting paint, caulk, adhesive, and sealant in corners and other tight areas; verify compatibility with your specific tool before use.
XXGO 4 Pcs Oscillating Multi Tool Scraper Blades for Scraping Cutting Removing Paint Caulk Adhesive Sealant XG4201 Review
A compact scraper set that punches above its weight
An oscillating multi-tool is only as useful as the accessories you hang on it, and scrapers are the attachments I burn through most. I’ve been testing the XXGO scraper blades—a four-piece set with two rigid 2-inch scrapers and two 4-inch tapered sealant cutters—and put them through a week of real jobs: cutting out bathroom silicone, lifting carpet, removing adhesive residue, and chasing old paint in corners. They’re simple stainless pieces, but sharp geometry and sensible sizing make them more capable than they look.
What’s in the set, and how they fit
You get:
- Two 2-inch rigid stainless scrapers (roughly 3 inches long by 2 inches wide)
- Two tapered 4-inch stainless sealant cutters (about 0.4 inch wide at the tip)
Both styles use a standard open-back, multi-fit interface. On my Ryobi and a quick-change DeWalt, the blades mounted securely. On the DeWalt, I did need to pay attention to alignment—the flange wanted to bias the blade slightly off-center until I reseated it. That’s typical of universal OIS plates with multiple pin options, but it’s worth noting.
If your tool uses Starlock (Bosch/Fein Starlock, Supercut, and related models) or certain Dremel Multimax and Craftsman bolt-on systems, this set won’t fit. For everyone on the usual OIS-compatible platforms—Ryobi, DeWalt (non-Starlock), Makita, Milwaukee, Ridgid, Rockwell, Porter-Cable, and the many house brands—these should slot right in. Still, check your manual before you buy; compatibility quirks are real with oscillating tools.
Out-of-the-box sharpness and edge geometry
Out of the package, the edges are aggressively keen—much sharper than most stock scrapers and closer to a honed knife edge than a stamped accessory. The 2-inch scrapers have a slight primary bevel that lets them glide under paint and soft adhesives without chattering. The 4-inch tapered blades are essentially long, narrow knives meant to track along a bead or joint. That slender profile is ideal for cutting out silicone and acrylic caulk in tight seams where a putty knife can’t reach.
Because these are stainless (not hardened bi-metal or carbide), edge retention tracks with the material you attack. In soft media—silicone, latex caulk, carpet backing—they stay sharp for a surprisingly long time. In abrasive or dirty work (adhesives loaded with grit, roofing materials, or paint over sanded surfaces) you’ll feel them lose bite more quickly. The upside of stainless is corrosion resistance and easy touch-ups; more on that in a bit.
Performance on real tasks
Silicone and caulk removal
- The 4-inch tapered blade is the standout here. I ran it along a bathroom base and around a toilet base to cut 10+ year-old silicone. At medium speed with light forward pressure and a low attack angle, it tracked cleanly and didn’t wander. A second pass lifted the remaining film. Because the blade is thin and sharp, it gets between the bead and substrate without tearing into painted trim or tile glaze—assuming you keep the angle shallow and let the oscillation do the work.
Paint and adhesive scraping
- For paint drips on wood trim, the 2-inch rigid scraper did a clean lift with minimal denting when I kept the tool under half speed. Cranking the speed up makes the edge chatter and telegraph into softer woods; easing off preserves the surface. On old construction adhesive smears over plywood, the scraper worked well initially but needed a quick touch-up after 20–30 minutes. It will do the job; just expect to refresh the edge if you’re tackling a whole room of subfloor cleanup.
Carpet and soft flooring tasks
- I used the 4-inch tapered blade as a cutter to slice carpet along a wall and to free tack strip underlayment tape. It sliced cleaner than a hook blade and kept my cuts tight to the baseboard. A narrower profile does mean you’ll want to guide it carefully to keep straight lines, but the oscillating action prevents bunching that you sometimes get with utility knives.
Residue and sealant on metal
- Stainless on stainless is a good match. I cleaned off tar and butyl residue on a powder-coated bracket; the 2-inch scraper lifted the bulk, and a mineral spirits wipe finished it. No rust stains or discoloration from the blade—even after leaving it wet on the bench overnight.
What these blades aren’t for
- They’re not demolition scrapers. If you try to lever nails, scrape cured thinset, or chew through heavily sand-laden coatings, you’ll burn the edge and could kink the blade. For that kind of abuse, you want carbide or at least a heavier-gauge, hardened scraper.
Durability and maintenance
Stainless was the right call for a scraper set that’s going to see moisture and solvents. The edges do roll on gritty work faster than a hardened or carbide scraper, but they also sharpen easily. I kept a fine diamond card at the ready and did 10–12 light strokes per side any time I felt the bite drop. Each tune-up took under a minute and restored cutting performance. If you prefer a grinder, a light kiss on a fine wheel works, though it’s easy to overheat the thin tip on the tapered blades if you aren’t careful.
Heat is the enemy with oscillating scrapers. Running at full speed against stubborn adhesive will blue the edge and soften it. I had the best results at lower oscillation speeds with a mist of mineral spirits or adhesive remover to keep things cool and lubricated. Short passes with a pause in between extend edge life noticeably.
After a week of mixed use, I’d rate longevity as “good for stainless”: each blade handled multiple jobs with intermittent touch-ups. Having two of each style in the box is practical—you can swap mid-task and maintain momentum while a blade cools or waits for sharpening.
Control and surface safety
The rigid 2-inch blade gives predictable feedback. Keep the tool flat, lean into a 10–15° attack angle, and you’ll lift coatings without gouging the substrate. The tapered 4-inch blade demands a steadier hand due to its narrow spine, but its precision is what makes it so effective in corners and seams. If you’re worried about marring, run a strip of painter’s tape on either side of your cut line; the blades are sharp enough that they’ll slice the bead before the tape frays.
One practical note: these edges are genuinely sharp. Treat them like knives. I store them in a small blade sleeve between tasks and wear cut-resistant gloves during swaps. It’s easy to forget you’re holding a scraper until you brush a finger against the bevel.
Tips for best results
- Use the right blade for the job: 2-inch for lifting, 4-inch tapered for cutting along a line.
- Start at lower speeds; increase only as needed to avoid heat and chatter.
- Keep the angle shallow and let the oscillation do the work—don’t pry.
- Pre-score thick silicone beads, or soften with a heat gun, for cleaner cuts.
- Refresh the edge with a diamond card; it takes less than a minute and pays off.
- Wipe down with mineral spirits after adhesive work; dry to prevent residue build-up.
Value
It’s a straightforward set, and that’s part of the appeal. You get four useful, purpose-driven blades at a budget-friendly price, and they fill a common gap in multi-tool kits where scrapers are often an afterthought. The duplication of each style isn’t wasteful—it’s sensible for anyone who works through a day’s worth of adhesive removal or caulk cutting.
Bottom line
The XXGO scraper blades are sharp, predictable, and sized for real-world tasks. They excel at cutting out caulk and lifting coatings in tight spaces, and they can pull double duty as carpet cutters when you need a clean line against a wall. Edge retention is decent for stainless, and easy touch-ups extend their life. Compatibility is broadly good across OIS-style tools, but Starlock users and certain Dremel/Craftsman owners should look elsewhere.
Recommendation: I recommend this set to DIYers and pros who need sharp, precise scrapers for caulk, paint, and soft adhesive removal, especially if you’re running a common OIS-compatible tool like Ryobi, DeWalt, Makita, or Milwaukee. The combination of initial sharpness, practical blade profiles, and the convenience of duplicates makes them a solid addition to a multi-tool kit. If your workflow demands demolition-grade abrasion resistance or you’re on a Starlock platform, choose a carbide or Starlock-specific scraper instead; otherwise, these hit the sweet spot of performance and price.
Project Ideas
Business
Niche Paint & Caulk Removal Service
Offer focused removal jobs for homeowners and contractors: bathroom caulk replacement, window and door trim paint removal, or kitchen backsplash prep. Market quick-turn, low-dust removal in tight areas where scrapers excel. Charge per linear foot or per fixture and upsell re-caulking, priming or touchup painting.
Tile Prep and Repair Micro-Contracting
Specialize in prepping surfaces for tile regrouting or replacement: remove old grout, vinyl adhesive and caulk with precision blades, then provide grout, sealing or tile replacement. Target renovators and Airbnb hosts with same-day small-bathroom or backsplash services priced as flat-fee jobs.
Furniture Refurbishing & Resale
Use the blades to strip paint, remove adhesive and clean hardware recesses on vintage furniture. Refinish and flip pieces on Etsy, Facebook Marketplace or at local boutiques. Offer a premium 'refurbish from pickup' service and include before/after photos to build a portfolio.
Home-Prep Detail Package for Real Estate
Partner with realtors to provide targeted detail work before listings: remove old caulk, clean tub seams, strip paint drips and tidy trim to improve listing photos. Price as an add-on staging service; sellers appreciate small, high-impact fixes for better market presentation.
Consumables & Mobile Blade Replacement
Start a small local supply business selling compatible scraper and sealant blades, or offer a mobile service that brings fresh blades to renovation sites. Bundle blade packs with on-site sharpening/replacement, instruction on blade choice, and a small rental fleet of oscillating tools for DIYers.
Creative
Vintage Cabinet Revival
Remove old paint and hardened caulk from cabinet corners, door jambs and around hinges using the 2" scraper and 4" tapered blades. Clean tight areas, strip finish down to bare wood, then sand and refinish for a professional-looking refurbished kitchen or bathroom cabinet set.
Reclaimed-Tile Coasters & Trivets
Use the blades to carefully separate, scrape and clean old ceramic or quarry tiles salvaged from demolitions. Remove grout and adhesive in corners, smooth edges and mount on cork or wood backings to make rustic coasters, trivets or decorative tiles.
Inset Wood Inlay Channels
Score and scrape thin channels and dadoes in reclaimed or soft woods to accept metal, resin or contrasting wood inlays. The tapered blade lets you start precise cuts in tight corners and the scraper cleans up glue squeeze-out for crisp inlay edges.
Distressed Metal & Signage Art
Strip flaking paint and adhesive from metal sheets, license plates or old signs to create layered distressed pieces. Use the scraper to expose underlying textures and the tapered blade to cut narrow removal lines for decorative patterns and mixed-media wall art.
Custom Picture Frames from Salvaged Materials
Prep salvaged wood, molding and metal by removing old paint, caulk and glue residues in tight rabbet areas. Create mixed-material frames (wood + tile or metal inlay), ensuring clean mating surfaces and tight corners for a boutique, handmade look.