I discovered I needed my chisel for a woodworking
project. I’m taking a course in hand-cut
dovetails. I need a special saw, which I
have courtesy of my grandfather. The
chisel I have courtesy of myself.
I bought it maybe 30-35 years ago. It’s a Stanley 5/8 inch wood chisel made in
the US. The steel? Beats me.
I bought it at a time when Stanley stood for quality and that was enough
for me.
I took it once to a community theater when I did technical
theatre. We were building a set with
lots of doors, so that mean lots of passage sets (aka doorknobs and locks). I looked up and found a co-volunteer using my
chisel to hammer small nails out of wood.
I’d like to say that he was able to use his hands after a
few years to therapy but I’d never hurt anyone that bad over tools. Fortunately I put a halt to his activity
before too much damage had occurred. I
just took it home and kept the damaged edge as a reminder never to lend any
tool I cared about.
Now it was time to rehabilitate that tool. So I got out my stones.
Just in case you don’t know, most wood chisels are sharpened
on only one side. Hence the term,
chisel-grind. The flat edge lets you cut
straight through the wood, while the beveled edge clears the wood away from the
cut. If you sharpened both sides, yes it
would be sharper, but it would drift away from the cut line.
I have a nice Norton combination coarse/fine stone I bought
years ago. It’s 11.5 inches long and 2.5
inches wide and I really like that size.
It’s hard to get the right angle for each stroke, but once you get it,
11 inches gives you a lot of sharpening distance.
I oiled it up and started on the coarse side, but it wasn’t
taking the metal off as fast as I wanted. So I switched to my little DMT combo diamond
stone. These stones use water as a
lubricant so it’s easy to clean up and store.
I bought the DMT so I could touch up an axe or knife blade in the field. The coarse diamond worked great, but the
relatively small size made the job tedious.
I also thought the ratio of diamond material to open polymer made the
effective sharpening area significantly small and reduced the metal removal
efficiency.
On the left the Norton combination stone; the red is the fine grit. The EZE Lap, and the right is my diamond DMT Combo. |
I pulled out my EZE Lap, a six inch long fine diamond
stone. That really took the edge
down. Before long I had worked out all
the edge damage and had a nice wire edge.
Now it was back to the Norton stone. I continued on the coarse side, which made
finer marks than the fine diamond EZE Lap.
I guess it makes sense. The
coarse stone is less abrasive than the fine diamond.
I first flat polished the wire edge away on the back of the
chisel and did a second uniform one across the chisel’s edge and moved to the
other side of the Norton stone, the fine side.
("Come to the fine side Luke! I am
your father…") Again I removed the wire edge and repeated the sharpening until I
had a third wire edge. I carefully
polished the back of the chisel and was finished.
It's a pretty good edge, but the right tip isn't perfect. I suspect its part of the way I put pressure on the chisel during sharpening. |
Did I get it sharp? I
think so. I shaved a few curls from a
block of yew wood I had in the basement and was very happy with its action.
I shaved a few small shavings with my chisel. I wanted to see how thin I could make them and how much effort it took. |
Could I get it sharper?
Maybe. Depends on the steel. I could have gone to an ultra fine polish and
left the face mirror shiny. But would
the edge hold up? Steel for chisels is
selected for impact and bending properties not necessarily hardness or even
edge retention . Some woods are so hard
the best you can do is to slowly remove a 32nd inch thick shaving at
a time. Most woodworkers would rather
have to resharpen more often than break a chisel.
I’m happy with the way this sharpening project turned
out. I got a uniform edge at about 25
degrees, with a straight, sharp cutting edge.
In the spirit of complete honesty I used a little wheeled gismo that holds
the chisel at a constant angle. I don’t
have any idea where I bought it, but for sharpening a chisel or wood plane
blade, it’s the bomb!!!