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Chisel sharpening system recommendations
I want a system for my toolbox to sharpen chisels on site - so no bench
grinders! I want it to put a finer edge on chisels in use, and not for resharpening any realy blunt ones. The choice seems to be between a honing guide and an oilstone, or the Trend Fasttrack system. Can anyone recommend a particualr one? And is the Trend system worth the expense? cheers dg |
Chisel sharpening system recommendations
dg wrote:
I want a system for my toolbox to sharpen chisels on site - so no bench grinders! Angle grinder! :) I want it to put a finer edge on chisels in use, and not for resharpening any realy blunt ones. The choice seems to be between a honing guide and an oilstone, or the Trend Fasttrack system. Can anyone recommend a particualr one? And is the Trend system worth the expense? I liked a simple diamond 'stone' - medium grit. It's gonna depend on what you want the chisels for. |
Chisel sharpening system recommendations
dg wrote:
I want a system for my toolbox to sharpen chisels on site - so no bench grinders! I want it to put a finer edge on chisels in use, and not for resharpening any realy blunt ones. The choice seems to be between a honing guide and an oilstone, or the Trend Fasttrack system. Can anyone recommend a particualr one? And is the Trend system worth the expense? In the workshop I use a Stanley honing guide & a cheap set of diamond stones like these http://www.screwfix.com/app/sfd/cat/...38070&id=10468 Not the best in the world, but cheap enough to chuck when they wear & much easier to use than an oilstone. I carry a Diamond Sharpening Pen around http://www.screwfix.com/app/sfd/cat/...68246&ts=38184 with a little practice & a steady eye you can improve the edge on a chisel on site. Also handy for router cutters, knives etc. Worth reading is http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scary_sharp -- Dave The Medway Handyman www.medwayhandyman.co.uk 01634 717930 07850 597257 |
Chisel sharpening system recommendations
dg Wrote: I want a system for my toolbox to sharpen chisels on site - so no bench grinders! I want it to put a finer edge on chisels in use, and not for resharpening any realy blunt ones. The choice seems to be between a honing guide and an oilstone, or the Trend Fasttrack system. Can anyone recommend a particualr one? And is the Trend system worth the expense? cheers dg I carry a medium diamond stone and a Stanley honing guide. To touch up a chisel takes about a minute so why would you bother with anything else ? -- Nick H |
Chisel sharpening system recommendations
DMT diamond wetstone.
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Chisel sharpening system recommendations
On Tue, 07 Nov 2006 22:32:19 GMT, "The Medway Handyman"
wrote: In the workshop I use a Stanley honing guide & a cheap set of diamond stones like these http://www.screwfix.com/app/sfd/cat/...38070&id=10468 Not the best in the world, but cheap enough to chuck when they wear & much easier to use than an oilstone. Wow. Aldi sell that exact set for a couple of quid. I bought two last year to use. Very useful they have been to, from sharpening to flattening the surface on disk pads. |
Chisel sharpening system recommendations
EricP wrote: On Tue, 07 Nov 2006 22:32:19 GMT, "The Medway Handyman" wrote: In the workshop I use a Stanley honing guide & a cheap set of diamond stones like these http://www.screwfix.com/app/sfd/cat/...38070&id=10468 Not the best in the world, but cheap enough to chuck when they wear & much easier to use than an oilstone. Wow. Aldi sell that exact set for a couple of quid. I bought two last year to use. Very useful they have been to, from sharpening to flattening the surface on disk pads. I bought a set of them some years ago and just couldn't get an edge. I think the tin must have flexed in use so rounding my efforts off. I got a slab of a diamond stone with one face so fine I thought it was just the back of the bar. The other cuts like broken glass through chalk. Getting diamond grits is one thing but keeping them flat is another. they re only as good as the backing strip they are laminated to. No messing with oil is the best thing about them. Having said that my old oil stone is still perfectly flat after years of use. ******* I've got one of those clamps that you can fix a blade to in order to hold it at the right angle but have yet to use it. I've had it so long I doubt I could find it without a rigorous sort out. The problem with them is that you need a slight curve in a plane blade and for sharpening chisels, it isn't worth the effort of getting it set up. The best thing if you need sharp chisels at all times is a tool roll and use it meticulously. Which -after a while, you just don't bother with. It takes five minutes to get an edge on a chisel and the more often you do it, the easier and quicker it is to do. |
Chisel sharpening system recommendations
On Wed, 08 Nov 2006 00:12:53 GMT, EricP wrote:
|On Tue, 07 Nov 2006 22:32:19 GMT, "The Medway Handyman" wrote: | |In the workshop I use a Stanley honing guide & a cheap set of diamond stones |like these |http://www.screwfix.com/app/sfd/cat/...38070&id=10468 |Not the best in the world, but cheap enough to chuck when they wear & much |easier to use than an oilstone. My two sided, coarse and fine, carborundum stone works well and cost peanuts, not sure where it came from. | |Wow. Aldi sell that exact set for a couple of quid. Not any more, but they will probably appear on the specials list some time in the future My exact duplicate set came from Lidl, if one wants to wait till they come round on the specials list again. -- Dave Fawthrop dave hyphenologist co uk Google Groups is IME the *worst* method of accessing usenet. GG subscribers would be well advised get a newsreader, say Agent, and a newsserver, say news.individual.net. These will allow them: to see only *new* posts, a killfile, and other goodies. |
Chisel sharpening system recommendations
On 7 Nov 2006 19:36:46 -0800, "Weatherlawyer"
wrote: EricP wrote: On Tue, 07 Nov 2006 22:32:19 GMT, "The Medway Handyman" wrote: In the workshop I use a Stanley honing guide & a cheap set of diamond stones like these http://www.screwfix.com/app/sfd/cat/...38070&id=10468 Not the best in the world, but cheap enough to chuck when they wear & much easier to use than an oilstone. Wow. Aldi sell that exact set for a couple of quid. I bought two last year to use. Very useful they have been to, from sharpening to flattening the surface on disk pads. I bought a set of them some years ago and just couldn't get an edge. I think the tin must have flexed in use so rounding my efforts off. I got a slab of a diamond stone with one face so fine I thought it was just the back of the bar. The other cuts like broken glass through chalk. Getting diamond grits is one thing but keeping them flat is another. they re only as good as the backing strip they are laminated to. No messing with oil is the best thing about them. Having said that my old oil stone is still perfectly flat after years of use. ******* I've got one of those clamps that you can fix a blade to in order to hold it at the right angle but have yet to use it. I've had it so long I doubt I could find it without a rigorous sort out. The problem with them is that you need a slight curve in a plane blade and for sharpening chisels, it isn't worth the effort of getting it set up. The best thing if you need sharp chisels at all times is a tool roll and use it meticulously. Which -after a while, you just don't bother with. It takes five minutes to get an edge on a chisel and the more often you do it, the easier and quicker it is to do. I agree with your thoughts but I am interested in this tool roll? Sharpening takes longer than using, a bit of a pain. |
Chisel sharpening system recommendations
dg wrote:
I want a system for my toolbox to sharpen chisels on site - so no bench grinders! I want it to put a finer edge on chisels in use, and not for resharpening any realy blunt ones. The choice seems to be between a honing guide and an oilstone, or the Trend Fasttrack system. Can anyone recommend a particualr one? And is the Trend system worth the expense? cheers dg I use a Tormek wetstone - easy, fast, great results. Dave |
Chisel sharpening system recommendations
Do a google search for Scary Sharp - this uses a sucession of finer and
finer grades of emery paper on a glass plate. Very cheap and sucessful - I use this in conjunction with a stanley guide to get the angle correct. Trev NoSpam wrote: dg wrote: I want a system for my toolbox to sharpen chisels on site - so no bench grinders! I want it to put a finer edge on chisels in use, and not for resharpening any realy blunt ones. The choice seems to be between a honing guide and an oilstone, or the Trend Fasttrack system. Can anyone recommend a particualr one? And is the Trend system worth the expense? cheers dg I use a Tormek wetstone - easy, fast, great results. Dave |
Chisel sharpening system recommendations
On 2006-11-08 11:45:04 +0000, NoSpam said:
dg wrote: I want a system for my toolbox to sharpen chisels on site - so no bench grinders! I want it to put a finer edge on chisels in use, and not for resharpening any realy blunt ones. The choice seems to be between a honing guide and an oilstone, or the Trend Fasttrack system. Can anyone recommend a particualr one? And is the Trend system worth the expense? cheers dg I use a Tormek wetstone - easy, fast, great results. Dave So do I, but I wouldn't think of it as something for site use.... |
Chisel sharpening system recommendations
Andy Hall wrote:
On 2006-11-08 11:45:04 +0000, NoSpam said: dg wrote: I want a system for my toolbox to sharpen chisels on site - so no bench grinders! I want it to put a finer edge on chisels in use, and not for resharpening any realy blunt ones. The choice seems to be between a honing guide and an oilstone, or the Trend Fasttrack system. Can anyone recommend a particualr one? And is the Trend system worth the expense? cheers dg I use a Tormek wetstone - easy, fast, great results. Dave So do I, but I wouldn't think of it as something for site use.... Ah, didn't see the "site" bit. RTFQ! Dave |
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