In general terms the saws made for wood will spin the blade way too fast for cutting metal with a tooth style blade. Way too many SFPM's.
The exception is Aluminum where speed is ok as long as you don't let heat build up because if you do the kerf will tend to close up on the back side of the cut as it cools. The material spreads because of the heat and contracts when it cools back down. I have agressively drilled holes in 6061-T6 and when measured with a plug gauge they are actually smaller than the measured drill size (.500"diameter, 10K rpm, 100 IPM, 1/2" flat stock) without coolant it looked like it was snowing and the holes were U/S, with through tool coolant all was well.
For thin steel the abrasive blades will work, keep your face protected.
For SS life just sucks without a slow cutting speed.
Allways consider that carbide tipped blades will resist wear and heat right up to the point where the heat softens the braze and the disc spits the teeth out like in a real good bar fight.
Any tool improperly used is a potentially deadly weapon but is encouraged nevertheless.
All the best,
Martin