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I figure most folks here have seen how them thar' high-falootin
Japanese chisels have a concave bottom so that, when lapping the bottom, the only material you have to remove is on the perimeter... not in the middle. (If not, here's a pic: http://www.benchworks.com.au/images/...isel%20Set.JPG) Supposing that I wanted to have this nice feature on my existing, non-stratospherically-priced chisels, does anybody know any relatively easy way to achieve this? Perhaps with a conical grinding stone mounted in a drill-press? Alternatively, does anybody have any tricks for automating the laping process? I've lapped a few of my chisels but, with the larger ones like the 1.25"... that's a lot of material to remove. It sure would be nice if there was some contraption that I could clamp my chisel and stone to and it would just grind them against each other for an hour while I went to get a sandwich. Anybody seen something like this, or shall I design one myself? - Joe |
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