I use a piece of wood, about 2" wide, 3/4" thick that I clamp to the bench so it overhangs by about 5 or 6 inches. The end that overhangs has a V cut into it. That is where I do the saw work,,within that V. It keeps the sheet stock from flexing if you don't make it too shallow & wide. Just enough to work inside it and still maintain stability.
Maybe that's what 'docone' means by a pad,,I don't know..
If the sheet stock flexes even a tiny amount, it will pinch the blade on each down (cutting) stroke and the blade will break prematurely from the stress.
They're going to break anyway, that's a given!,,but keeping the cuts light, avoiding twists, keep the saw frame verticle (if sawing that way) and keeping the work steady and flex free will help alot.
Use a finer cut blade on the thin stock to avoid it grabbing,,just like a hacksaw on thin stock,,it doesn't cut so nicely when the blade is too coarse.
Protect your eyes,,those blades can really take a ride when they break. Sometimes they only break in two and both parts are still clamped in the frame, and you can shorten the frame up and use the longer of the two for a few more exasperating strokes if you really feel the need too.
But sometimes a section will break out and really take off. They can hurt.