A
Anonymous
Guest
Heres a review of some cheapo chisels:
I recently bought a set of these, Axminster's cheapest chisels.
The finish is not particularly fine and they don't look very nice with the 2 tone handles, infact about as stylish as a 1980s shell suit.
They come in an unattractive mock leather wallet which I found to be useless so binned it.
One of the chunky and clumsy looking handles had slightly off-center alignment with the blades; not so bad as to make it worth sending back at less than £3 each.
So are they any good?
Chunky handles quite comfortable in use.
Well they sharpened up with no problem - just a quick few passes on the oil stone, turned and wire edge removed from face, done in seconds. The faces show machine marks but are all flat to almost concave along the length - which is the perfect shape for rapid sharpening.
And they cut, and hold their edge, perfectly well.
As well as my normal joinery I've been practising a bit of woodcarving on softwood and oak and so have given them plenty of use.
Ideal for a beginner to make all his/her sharpening mistakes on as they are "disposable" at this price.
But also perfectly useable for a pro.
Verdict: look nasty, but excellent value for money.
Why pay more?
cheers
Jacob
I recently bought a set of these, Axminster's cheapest chisels.
The finish is not particularly fine and they don't look very nice with the 2 tone handles, infact about as stylish as a 1980s shell suit.
They come in an unattractive mock leather wallet which I found to be useless so binned it.
One of the chunky and clumsy looking handles had slightly off-center alignment with the blades; not so bad as to make it worth sending back at less than £3 each.
So are they any good?
Chunky handles quite comfortable in use.
Well they sharpened up with no problem - just a quick few passes on the oil stone, turned and wire edge removed from face, done in seconds. The faces show machine marks but are all flat to almost concave along the length - which is the perfect shape for rapid sharpening.
And they cut, and hold their edge, perfectly well.
As well as my normal joinery I've been practising a bit of woodcarving on softwood and oak and so have given them plenty of use.
Ideal for a beginner to make all his/her sharpening mistakes on as they are "disposable" at this price.
But also perfectly useable for a pro.
Verdict: look nasty, but excellent value for money.
Why pay more?
cheers
Jacob