I just spotted this on the American Jim Bode Tools website:
https://www.jimbodetools.com/collection ... race-91951
$150 for an 8" sweep brace (albeit one of the best models). I got a 10" one a few years ago from the same dealer for well under half that price.
It is of course a matter of supply and demand. The supply, while large, is finite as no braces seem to be made these days to the old degree of solidity and quality. However, the fact that people are clearly prepared to pay the prices led me to think that it might become worthwhile for a modern manufacturer to produce a brace to the old standards with perhaps even finer tolerances.
I can't imagine them becoming mass market tools again but I could see a niche manufacturer e.g. Clifton, Lee-Neilsen or Veritas making one which would not be cheap but which would find a market amongst hand tool users.
Any views?
https://www.jimbodetools.com/collection ... race-91951
$150 for an 8" sweep brace (albeit one of the best models). I got a 10" one a few years ago from the same dealer for well under half that price.
It is of course a matter of supply and demand. The supply, while large, is finite as no braces seem to be made these days to the old degree of solidity and quality. However, the fact that people are clearly prepared to pay the prices led me to think that it might become worthwhile for a modern manufacturer to produce a brace to the old standards with perhaps even finer tolerances.
I can't imagine them becoming mass market tools again but I could see a niche manufacturer e.g. Clifton, Lee-Neilsen or Veritas making one which would not be cheap but which would find a market amongst hand tool users.
Any views?