Thanks. I haven't finished reading that yet, but I will. I confess I'd
be hard-pressed to give up the methods I've adopted, namely those
developed by our own Brent Beach ( now sadly deceased).
Most regrettably, his service provider (Telus ) discontinued providing
web site functionality to their customers. I have down-loaded copies of
some of his pages to my own PC, but I am not in a position to support
them myself. In any case, what I have is quite incomplete and of course,
I don't own the rights to it. Basically, Brent methodically researched
and developed a highly effective system of multiple micro-bevels which
is inexpensive to implement, and very time-efficient, yielding
consistent results using 3M micro-abrasives on glass. Scary Sharp taken
to the next level. His calculators and jig designs are invaluable, IMO.
I take some pleasure in having encouraged him to investigate & create a
calculator for micro-bevel angles of tapered plane irons.
Happily, I find that Brent's pages have been given new life here:
https://brentbeach.ca/Sharpen/index.html
Kudos to whoever decided to do that!
It's a rabbit hole, but well worth the journey!
Don
On 2021-06-13 11:31 a.m., stephen rosenthal wrote:
> http://www.woodcentral.com/cgi-
bin/readarticle.pl?dir=newarticles&file=articles_958.shtml
> <http://www.woodcentral.com/cgi-
bin/readarticle.pl?dir=newarticles&file=articles_958.shtml>
>
>
> As noted in Weaver’s exhaustive study, be sure to check out Winston
> Chang’s website and video.
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
>> On Jun 13, 2021, at 10:24 AM, Don Schwartz wrote:
>>
>>
>> Unicorn method?
>>
>> Don
>>
>> On 2021-06-13 10:08 a.m., Stephen Rosenthal wrote:
>>> Scott,
>>>
>>> I’ve got a few of the exact same chisels - Stanley No. 60s - as well
>>> as some plastic handled Buck Bros. No. 100s, complete with paint
>>> specks and protected by much less elegant blue tape and Plasti-Dip.
>>> They were my dad’s, so they’re more than 60 years old. I can bang
>>> the hell out of them (as I’m sure my dad did) and they keep coming
>>> back for more. Since discovering and utilizing the Unicorn method of
>>> sharpening, they perform every bit as good as my set of LN chisels.
>>> So much for all the gobbledygook about modern steels.
>>>
>>> Stephen
>>>> On Jun 13, 2021, at 7:52 AM, scottg wrote:
>>>>
>>>> A chisel of limited gloriousity.
>>>> This chisel slept in bags and boxes for many years. It traveled
>>>> in trucks and cars.
>>>> It went up on roofs and down into basements and to the bottom of
>>>> bridges. It pared drawers and eased entry doors, hacked
>>>> construction joints, made big lap joints or whatever else was asked.
>>>> It was treated with marginal respect
>>>> But she came though every single time anyway.
>>>>
>>>> Another personal road warrior. Still ready for service should the
>>>> occasion arise
>>>>
>>>>
http://users.snowcrest.net/kitty/sgrandstaff/images/oldtools/stanleychisel.jpg
>>>>
>>>> I recall spending maybe an hour making the sheath (no pattern to
>>>> follow, I was making it up).
>>>> Time well spent
>>>> yours scott
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>> *******************************
>>>> Scott Grandstaff
>>>> Box 409 Happy Camp, Ca 96039
>>>> scottg@s...
>>>> http://www.snowcrest.net/kitty/sgrandstaff/
>>>> http://www.snowcrest.net/kitty/hpages/index.html
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>> --
>> Social networks are free, but you are the product. (Popular Information)
>>
>> “Learn from yesterday, live for today, hope for tomorrow. The
>> important thing is not to stop questioning.” - Albert Einstein
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
--
Social networks are free, but you are the product. (Popular Information)
“Learn from yesterday, live for today, hope for tomorrow. The important thing is
not to stop questioning.” - Albert Einstein
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