I recently bought some Japanese chisels and part of the 'fun' is that you have to finish making them before you can use them. I followed the instructions here on the tools for working wood website.
All went well until I came to the last and thinnest chisel a 1.5mm (don't ask why I bought such a thin chisel - I just did OK )
As you can see below I can now chisel round corners with it :roll:
The instructions say, "With the hoop seating correctly, seat the hoop permanently by gently hammering the hoop down directly or using a cat's paw. Warning: do not hold the handle in a vise (sic), since hammering a clamped handle will loosen the blade. Hammer the hoop with the blade resting cross-grain on a scrap of wood." . . which is what I did.
Not owning a cat I used a suitably sized socket - big enough to clear the wooden handle but small enough to seat on the hoop. This worked fine on the other chisels but evidently not on the thin one. I don't think that it was anything to do with using the socket - and I swear that I wasn't using a lump hammer :lol: My advise would be a vise to clamp onto the top of the blade where it tapers out to make the socket to join the handle.
One thing that the accident did highlight was the construction of these chisels. You can (hopefully) clearly see that the lower part of the blade has fractured as it is hard/brittle, but the top half is much more malleable and has bent. I might try and regrind the bit that is left although there is only about 15mm of usable material left.
Hope this helps someone else from ending up with a 135 degree chisel like wot I've got now. :shock:
Steve
(on holiday for the next few weeks and so hopefully will be spending a bit of time in the workshop 8) )
All went well until I came to the last and thinnest chisel a 1.5mm (don't ask why I bought such a thin chisel - I just did OK )
As you can see below I can now chisel round corners with it :roll:
The instructions say, "With the hoop seating correctly, seat the hoop permanently by gently hammering the hoop down directly or using a cat's paw. Warning: do not hold the handle in a vise (sic), since hammering a clamped handle will loosen the blade. Hammer the hoop with the blade resting cross-grain on a scrap of wood." . . which is what I did.
Not owning a cat I used a suitably sized socket - big enough to clear the wooden handle but small enough to seat on the hoop. This worked fine on the other chisels but evidently not on the thin one. I don't think that it was anything to do with using the socket - and I swear that I wasn't using a lump hammer :lol: My advise would be a vise to clamp onto the top of the blade where it tapers out to make the socket to join the handle.
One thing that the accident did highlight was the construction of these chisels. You can (hopefully) clearly see that the lower part of the blade has fractured as it is hard/brittle, but the top half is much more malleable and has bent. I might try and regrind the bit that is left although there is only about 15mm of usable material left.
Hope this helps someone else from ending up with a 135 degree chisel like wot I've got now. :shock:
Steve
(on holiday for the next few weeks and so hopefully will be spending a bit of time in the workshop 8) )