On Tue, 08 Mar 2005 02:49:41 GMT, the inscrutable "Tim Zimmerman"
spake:
I bought four sets of chisels from a used place. The kind with a light green
see-thru handle and a black trim - no brand. It performed fine for a few
weeks until a pearl sized chip came off in sections from the tip of the green
handle which I did not notice earlier. I was chiseling against the grain of the
wood, not along the grain as instructed from a book. But, I've chiseled against
the grain with a 10-year old Stanley (with a non-see-thru plastic handle) without
problems.
The problem is that a few of the green see-thru chisels have 10-15 percent
chips gone from its plastic striking surface. Since that day I am more careful.
I'm not sure whether I had used a wrong hammer or whether I pound them
too hard. What's the best way to repair these tool?
I'm with xrongor. Crutch tip 'em, use a wooden mallet, but I'll add
one more extremely important thing:
Give them to SWMBO and buy a REAL set for yourself.
================================================== ========
I drank WHAT? +
http://www.diversify.com
--Socrates + Web Application Programming