That saw will work but it will be a very rough cut. I posted this in another thread on cutting composite tubes:
1. Use a high-speed abrasive cut-off blade.
2. Support both sides of the cut so the pieces cannot move during cutting. Peeling-out the last fibers to be cut is very common if you don't do this.
3. Avoid generating too much heat during the cut. This depends a lot on the resin's heat resistance. If the resin softens and degrades at low temperature it will be difficult to get a neat cut. Water cooling may be required but be aware that wet carbon dust on metal is very corrosive to the metal (galvanic corrosion).
4. Rotate the tube while cutting very lightly into the surface. This minimizes the temperature reached at the cut. It also directs the cuting forces tangetial to the surface. With a straight through cutting action there will be times when the cutting forces are directed out from the surface and this causes peeling.
How do you do what I describe? Put an abrasive blade in a table saw, use the fence to control your cut length, and use
a piece of wood on your slide to push the tube until it touches the blade. Then rotate the tube as you slowly push it into the blade. The blade only needs to advance through the wall thickness but you can push it further to polish the cut on the side of the blade (you will cut into the wood too, but only on the first cut). Remember to hold onto the tube on both sides of the cut.
You will generate a lot of heat cutting fiberglass. If you are doing high volume cutting you must use water cooling.