woodbloke":2ofp8bkf said:
Grahamshed":2ofp8bkf said:
Call me a Philistine if you will but I really do not see the attraction in old hand tools. When we cleared out my fathers house there was a box full of old screwdrivers and 'stuff' , most of which ended up in the bin.
Sacrilege to some, I know.
Agreed. As others have said, there was an awful lot of 'tat' made in the olden days as well which hasn't survived...so maybe it's just the better stuff that seems to surface . There's plenty of good stuff made now as well (not so during the 70's etc) which to me is infinitely preferable to something that has to be nursed back to life having resided in a bucket of rust for the last umpteen years. I remain to be convinced that any Western steel (old or new) will surpass the cutting and edge holding qualities of my current Japanese chisels (no longer available) from WH...and I've tried most of them over the years (Old Marples, new AI, Sorby, Two Cherries etc etc) - Rob...Phillistine No. Deux :mrgreen:
I'd agree up to a point.
I think we live in a time when it has never been easier, if you know where to go, to obtain tools of the very finest quality. There are quite a number of boutique toolmakers, cottage indutries and small firms making and importing some of the best tools that have ever been made - many at prices that could not have been charged for tools before WW2. There is also a large DIY market, fed by some of the most atrocious cheap tat ever foisted upon a gullible market. I think that situation has arisen since WW2, driven by the rise of DIY and factory-based production of furniture, which in it's turn drove the old style of jobbing tradesman out of existence, and taking with it the market for decent, mid-price-range tools.
Before WW2, there were far more tradesmen and craftsmen doing hand work, both at the bench and on site - jobbing repairs, local builders, that sort of thing - and even more so before WW1. Thus, there was a large market for decent, well made tools that whilst not cheap, didn't cost the earth. There wasn't a market for cheap tat - very little DIY - so far fewer genuinely bad quality tools. The decent ones were made and sold in large numbers, and being of decent quality, many have survived; especially those that didn't see a lot of use, and received reasonable care. If they were decent then, they still are - so are worth a bit of effort to refurbish and use.
The old tool route is also an excellent way to assemble the basis of a good kit of decent tools without spending a fortune. To equip a workshop for hand furniture making needs a reasonable number of tools - say about 100. Bought new, that's a fair old investment - and may be beyond the means of many. Buying the very best tools available today would be a very serious investment, and beyond all but the very wealthiest. But buying secondhand is within the reach of most - and has the added satisfaction of rescuing decent tools from the ignominy of the council tip, and giving them a new lease of life.
By all means buy some tools new - I have - but old ones can be plenty good enough, and sometimes better than anything available new.