Hi,
out of curiosity, I recently bought a wooden spokeshave off ebay. First one I've ever touched. I would like to know the correct way to sharpen/hone the blade on such a tool. I've searched this site but not found anything about sharpening them.
It is made of beech, with a brass mouth and a flat-bottomed blade (usual type, as far as I can tell from internet pictures: narrow blade, vertical tangs at either end which friction fit into holes in the wooden body). The way it sits in the body seems to make it the equivalent of a VERY low angle bevel-up plane - i.e., the bevel is on the upper side and the flat back of the iron is almost co-planar with the brass mouth plate.
The blade was pretty blunt and black when I got it. I used my WorkSharp 3000 to re-flatten and polish the back of the blade, then honed it on a fine oilstone. I wasn't sure how to handle the bevel side. I noticed there was a dip behind the bevel then a parallel ridge, such that the top of the ridge was pretty much coplanar with the bevel: I found this enabled me to hone the bevel on the oil stone (with the stone in its box, the tangs of the inverted iron just cleared the box on either side, and the bench top).
The result seems pretty good (and it's the first time I've used my oil stone since buying the blessed Work Sharp! This might be the beginning of a whole new experience ). This spokeshave certainly works better than the piece of metal junk I previously owned. I haven't used it in anger yet, but the test cuts are encouraging.
My question is : how do you go about sharpening/honing such a blade? Is there a recognised/standard way? Are the blades of all wooden spokeshaves configured the same way?
Thanks in advance for sharing your knowledge and experience.
Chris
[a new searcher, on the journey]
out of curiosity, I recently bought a wooden spokeshave off ebay. First one I've ever touched. I would like to know the correct way to sharpen/hone the blade on such a tool. I've searched this site but not found anything about sharpening them.
It is made of beech, with a brass mouth and a flat-bottomed blade (usual type, as far as I can tell from internet pictures: narrow blade, vertical tangs at either end which friction fit into holes in the wooden body). The way it sits in the body seems to make it the equivalent of a VERY low angle bevel-up plane - i.e., the bevel is on the upper side and the flat back of the iron is almost co-planar with the brass mouth plate.
The blade was pretty blunt and black when I got it. I used my WorkSharp 3000 to re-flatten and polish the back of the blade, then honed it on a fine oilstone. I wasn't sure how to handle the bevel side. I noticed there was a dip behind the bevel then a parallel ridge, such that the top of the ridge was pretty much coplanar with the bevel: I found this enabled me to hone the bevel on the oil stone (with the stone in its box, the tangs of the inverted iron just cleared the box on either side, and the bench top).
The result seems pretty good (and it's the first time I've used my oil stone since buying the blessed Work Sharp! This might be the beginning of a whole new experience ). This spokeshave certainly works better than the piece of metal junk I previously owned. I haven't used it in anger yet, but the test cuts are encouraging.
My question is : how do you go about sharpening/honing such a blade? Is there a recognised/standard way? Are the blades of all wooden spokeshaves configured the same way?
Thanks in advance for sharing your knowledge and experience.
Chris
[a new searcher, on the journey]