Features
- LEILUO multi tool blade set, developed for complex operation scenarios, integrates a variety of blade materials and designs, covers comprehensively, meets daily cutting and sanding, and expands your tool diversity. It is a daily necessity and an excellent choice for DIY.
- CrV Japanese tooth vibration tool blade, designed for the most frequent wood drywall cutting tasks. With sharper teeth and enhanced durability, it provides an excellent cutting experience
- Bimetal and titanium plated oscillating blades can solve nails and other soft metals materials. The unique semi-circular blade design ensures better fit to the surface of the material, thereby improving stability.
- Diverse blade combinations, various sizes of saw blades, meet different usage needs, and are neatly stored in the included portable storage bag to save tool box space.
- In addition to the traditional cutting function, the unique hook knife is suitable for roof shingles, carpets, etc., and the scraper blades can efficiently remove glue residues; with a variety of grinding accessories with different particles, it can achieve multiple functions such as polishing, glue removal, and roof repair.
- The oscillating tool attachments interface is a universal design, compatible with most quick-release systems (such as DeWalt, M.akita) and non-quick-release system tools (such as Ryobi, Milwaukee) on the market. For more information, please see the details page.
- Please note! Not compatible with Star.lock, Star.lock plus, Star.lock Max interface tools. Dremel brand tools need to be used with an adapter (the adapter is included in the product)
Specifications
Color | BLACK |
Unit Count | 156 |
Related Tools
Related Articles
This 156-piece oscillating multi-tool accessory kit contains cutting, sanding and scraping blades and grinding pads for wood, drywall, soft metals, roofing shingles, carpet and adhesive removal. It includes CrV toothed blades for wood/drywall, bimetal and titanium-plated blades for cutting around nails and soft metals, hook and scraper blades, assorted sanding/grinding accessories, and a storage bag. The universal accessory interface fits most quick-release and non-quick-release oscillating tools but is not compatible with star-shaped locking interfaces; some rotary-style tools require the included adapter.
LEILUO 156 Pcs Multitool Blade Kits Oscillating Tool Cutting Sanding and Scraping Accessories with Storage Bag Oscillating Saw Blades Compatible with DeWalt Makita Dremel and More Review
Why I reached for the LEILUO kit
I keep a pile of oscillating-tool accessories on hand because jobs rarely stick to one material. On a recent stretch of bathroom refresh, door-trim tweaks, and an adhesive cleanup, I ran the LEILUO 156‑piece oscillating accessory kit through just about everything a multi-tool sees: drywall openings, wood trim, copper pipe nubs, errant nails in subfloor, grout and thinset, roofing shingles, old carpet and pad, and a lot of stubborn glue. After a few weeks of use across a DeWalt and a Ryobi tool—and a Dremel with the included adapter—I have a good sense of where this kit shines and where you’ll want to reach for something more premium.
What’s in the kit
This is a broad, task-first assortment: CrV Japanese-tooth wood/drywall blades for fast cuts, bi-metal and titanium-plated blades for nail-laden work and soft metals, semi-circular blades for controlled scoring and flush cuts, a hook blade for shingles and carpet, rigid and flexible scrapers, plus a stack of sanding and grinding accessories. Everything lives in a soft storage bag that packs down better than a plastic box in a job tote.
While there are many duplicates, that’s the point with consumables. The sizes are sensible (narrow for tight plunge cuts, wider for straight tracking), and the semi-circular options make it easy to ride along a surface without wandering.
Compatibility and fit
The interface is the common “universal” style and clicked into my DeWalt and Ryobi multi-tools without fuss. On a Dremel Multi‑Max, I needed the included adapter; once installed, the blades held securely. If you’re using a Starlock machine (Fein, newer Bosch models), this kit won’t fit—there’s no Starlock interface and no safe adapter workaround. For most quick‑release and bolt‑on heads from the big names outside Starlock, you’re covered.
Cutting performance in wood and drywall
The CrV Japanese‑tooth blades are tuned for speed. In pine and poplar trim they ripped cleanly with minimal tear-out when I let the blade do the work and kept the speed moderate. They’re excellent for undercutting door jambs before flooring and for fast drywall openings. In plywood and MDF, the cut quality stayed acceptable, though you’ll want a light post-sand to clean up fuzz on MDF edges.
As expected with budget CrV, the edge softens once you meet embedded grit or a stray fastener. I dulled a wood blade immediately on an old casing nail; swapping to a bi‑metal blade brought the job back on track. If your work often runs into unknowns behind surfaces, plan on using the bi‑metal and titanium‑plated blades as your default.
Around nails and soft metals
The bi‑metal and titanium‑plated options are the right call for flooring demo, baseboard removal where nails are a given, and for trimming soft metals. I used a bi‑metal to flush‑cut brad heads and a few ring shanks without losing too much pace. On soft copper and aluminum, cuts were predictable and clean. The titanium plating seems to buy you a bit of heat resistance on longer plunges, but it doesn’t make the blade immortal; expect normal wear, especially if you push the feed rate.
The semi‑circular shape pays dividends for control—riding it against a cabinet side or floor guides your cut and helps with depth management. It’s also excellent for scoring caulked paint lines to avoid tear‑out.
Grout, thinset, and abrasive tasks
For grout and thinset, the abrasive/grit blades included here did the heavy lifting. I cleared shower grout joints and shaved down thinset ridges on cement board. The performance is what I expect from value abrasives: fast at first, then tapering as the grit wears. On a typical bathroom wall, I needed a couple of blades to keep productivity up, which is exactly why having multiples in a kit matters. Keep the tool speed moderate and don’t lean on the blade; heat shortens life dramatically on abrasive jobs.
Scrapers and the hook knife round out the demolition side. The rigid scraper lifted vinyl tile glue and construction adhesive without chattering; the flexible scraper glided under painter’s tape and silicone residue with less chance of gouging. The hook knife is a quiet hero for shingles and old carpet—hook, slice, done—and the oscillation helps where a standard utility knife would bind.
Sanding and surface prep
The sanding pad and sheets are perfect for small‑area corrections: easing cut edges, blending spackle repairs, or nibbing between coats. The hook‑and‑loop backing held up, and the grit range covered coarse leveling down to pre‑paint feathering. An oscillating tool will never replace a dedicated sander for large areas, but when the tool is already in hand, it’s efficient to click a pad on and finish the detail in front of you.
Durability and value
This is a value‑oriented assortment, and durability tracks with that expectation. The CrV wood blades cut quickly but lose their bite faster than pro‑grade equivalents once they see abrasive materials. The bi‑metal and titanium‑plated blades hold up better around nails and metal, with a reasonable life if you avoid overheating. Abrasive grout blades work well but are consumables by nature. In practice, the kit’s strength is quantity: you don’t hesitate to swap a dull blade because there’s another in the bag.
I inspected the welds and interfaces—no misaligned hubs or out‑of‑flat segments in my set. A couple of blades had small burrs on the mounting slot; two strokes with a file cleaned them up. No fit issues once deburred.
Organization and usability
The soft bag is more useful than I expected. It keeps the loose odds together and fits in a tool bag pocket. I do wish the blades were printed with clearer, high‑contrast markings—material icons or tooth type labels fade fast. I solved this by grouping by type in small zip bags inside the pouch. If you live on a cart or in a van, consider a compartment organizer to speed selection.
Tips for best results
- Let the blade cut. Excess pressure overheats teeth and burns through abrasive grit.
- Pick the right tooth for the job: CrV for clean wood/drywall, bi‑metal/titanium for nails and soft metal, abrasive blades for grout/thinset.
- Use the semi‑circular blades for long straight cuts and depth control; reserve narrow straight blades for plunge cuts in tight spots.
- Keep speeds moderate on abrasive and metal tasks; higher speed rarely equals faster work.
- Clear dust and slurry frequently; it keeps cuts cooler and extends life.
What could be better
- No Starlock compatibility. If you’re on a Starlock platform, this isn’t for you.
- Markings are light. Etched, paint‑filled labels would help identify tooth type and material at a glance.
- I’d like to see an extra rigid scraper and a carbide‑tooth demolition blade included for heavier fastener‑laden work.
Who it’s for
- DIYers and homeowners who want a full bench of options for irregular projects without paying for premium blades one by one.
- Pros who need a backup stash for punch lists, light demo, or situations where losing a blade to unknowns is likely.
- Anyone outfitting a first multi‑tool who wants to learn what blade styles they actually use before buying specialty singles.
If you’re cutting abrasive siding all day or doing commercial demo around hardened fasteners, you’ll save time with higher‑end, purpose‑built blades. For everyone else, the breadth here covers most day‑to‑day tasks.
Recommendation
I recommend the LEILUO 156‑piece oscillating accessory kit for general-purpose use and budget‑conscious versatility. The assortment is thoughtful, the fit on common tools is trouble‑free (with a handy adapter for Dremel‑style interfaces), and the included duplicates make it easy to keep moving when a blade dulls mid‑job. You trade ultimate longevity for quantity, but for bathroom refreshes, trim adjustments, adhesive and grout removal, and mixed‑material repair work, this kit delivers solid performance and real convenience at a sensible cost. If you’re on Starlock, or you demand pro‑grade life in abrasive or metal‑heavy work, look elsewhere; otherwise, this is an easy add to a multi‑tool kit that earns its keep.
Project Ideas
Business
Small Repairs & Quick-Fix Service
Offer a neighborhood or online-bookable service for small household repairs that an oscillating tool excels at: trim and baseboard replacement, door sill/plinth repairs, grout removal and spot tile fixes, and adhesive/coating removal. The kit’s variety reduces the need for multiple specialist tools and speeds job turnaround.
Etsy Shop — Custom Inlay Goods
Turn the coaster and small-furniture ideas into a product line on Etsy or Shopify. Use the kit’s precision blades and sanding accessories to produce consistent, high-quality inlays, coasters, cutting boards, and shelf edges. Offer personalization (initials, logos, color choices) and include kits or tips as add-ons.
Quick Roof/Shingle Patch Service
Market a mobile 'shingle rescue' or patching service for small roof repairs where replacing a few shingles or removing damaged material is needed. The hook and scraper blades make quick work of old shingles and adhesive; bimetal blades help cut around nails. Position services as fast, low-cost alternatives to full roofing calls.
Tool-Accessory Rental + Workshops
Rent the full 156-piece kit to DIYers who need a one-off job done properly and run weekend workshops teaching oscillating tool techniques (plunge cuts, inlays, grout removal, shingle work). Charge rental fees plus workshop tickets; sell consumables (sanding pads, blades) at the events for extra revenue.
Content & Affiliate Monetization
Produce short how-to videos and step-by-step guides demonstrating specific uses of this accessory set (e.g., remove carpet glue, make floating shelves). Post on YouTube, Instagram, or TikTok, monetize with ads and affiliate links to the kit and complementary tools, and offer downloadable project plans for a small fee.
Creative
Reclaimed Wood Inlay Coasters
Use the CrV toothed blades for precise plunge cuts and the sanding pads to finish edges to create sets of inlay coasters from reclaimed wood. Cut channels for contrasting wood or resin inlays, scrape away glue with the scraper blade, and finish with progressively finer sanding pads for a professional look. Sell as bundled sets or custom-initial commissions.
Textured Shingle Wall Plaques
Turn leftover roofing shingles into rustic, textured wall art using the hook knife and scraper blades to remove granules and shape pieces. Combine with laser-cut plywood backings or salvaged wood frames, use sanding accessories to smooth edges and prepare surfaces for paint or stain, and create themed plaque series (house numbers, landscapes, quotes).
Flush-Mount Floating Shelves
Use semi-circular and straight plunge-cut blades to accurately cut channels and notches for hidden brackets and joinery in wood boards. The sanding/grinding pads let you round over or bevel edges and smooth surfaces for staining. Produce a line of minimalist floating shelves in custom lengths and finishes.
Upcycled Metal & Wood Accent Lamps
Cut soft metals and thin sheet using the bimetal/titanium-plated blades to create lamp shades, bases, or decorative panels. Use wooden offcuts for bodies, scrape old finishes and sand to final smoothness. Combine metal textures with warm wood to make unique tabletop or wall lamps.
Tile Mosaic Frames & Picture Borders
Use scraper blades and thin-cut saw blades to trim ceramic/porcelain tiles and remove old grout or adhesive. Design mosaic picture frames or decorative borders using cut tiles, then sand edges and mount onto reclaimed wood frames for finished art pieces.