OP is presumably a beginner which is why I suggest just honing at the universal default angle of 30º.
He can always venture down the rabbit hole of modern sharpening later, if he really wants to, but best avoided IMHO!
If Tony's chisels are ground to the standard makers bevel of 25º then honing at 30º is all he needs to do.I get more chisels from japan (that were used professionally and then cast aside for 50 years) sharpened my way than yours. There's nothing modern about it.
A very long very shallow bevel was also often used on english tools with a steep secondary or final bevel, presumably to speed sharpening. I've gotten in both on professionally used chisels (all deliberately sharpened the same) and planes that way.
The angle where a chisel stops failing is generally between 32 and 34 degrees. It's far smarter to sharpen a chisel at 25 degrees and then add a tiny stripe at one of those (and faster), but not much of the market of users is particularly smart. We're generally trying to do good clean work the easiest way possible.
Noises from the rabbit hole!People who think they hone at 30 degrees as jacob advocates often don't come nearly as close as they think ....
Yes I'm a relative beginner & yes they are ground to 25 degreesOP is presumably a beginner which is why I suggest just honing at the universal default angle of 30º.
He can always venture down the rabbit hole of modern sharpening later, if he really wants to, but best avoided IMHO!
Noises from the rabbit hole!
They come close enough, within a degree or so.
PS and avoid starting off with a sharpening jig - they actually make it slower and more difficult. Nobody bothered with them at all until the modern sharpening boom kicked off.
Yes I'm a relative beginner & yes they are ground to 25 degrees
I have a Veritas guide that belonged to my father , would this do. Thanks TonyPersonally, I grind at 25 or sometimes 22 degrees.
Please be certain not to grind right to the edge, or bluing/overheating is likely. Leave a small sliver un ground.
I agree with D-W that honing at 32 to 35 degrees will give a longer lasting edge. This honing band is best kept very small, for rapid sharpening.
Simple honing guide like Eclipse 36 is very effective. (Beware, some of the clones are horrid, Faithful comes to mind).
Best wishes,
David Charlesworth
Personally, I grind at 25 or sometimes 22 degrees.
Please be certain not to grind right to the edge, or bluing/overheating is likely. Leave a small sliver un ground.
I agree with D-W that honing at 32 to 35 degrees will give a longer lasting edge. This honing band is best kept very small, for rapid sharpening.
Simple honing guide like Eclipse 36 is very effective. (Beware, some of the clones are horrid, Faithful comes to mind).
Best wishes,
David Charlesworth
I have a Veritas guide that belonged to my father , would this do. Thanks Tony
You will make up your own mind I'm sure!I have a Veritas guide that belonged to my father , would this do. Thanks Tony
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