Phil Pascoe
Established Member
Not yet. mine haven't sold in the "for sales"
A month or two ago I recommended here people look at Footprint chisels as affordable sets! lol, these were not even the nicer wooden handled ones. What Sellers did for the 71, I hope I have not done for Footprint chisels!
Not yet. mine haven't sold in the "for sales"
Those black handled polished chisels were a thing of beautyWhen off to college in 1979 I bought a set of Blue smooth plastic handle bevel edged Stanley chisels. If I'd had the extra cash I'd have gone for the black handle version. The chisels have served me well and I cannot recall picking up anything that I would replace them with that was noticeably better and worth the large amount extra to replace them.
About.......
Colin
wait, paul is claiming that aldi chisels that are sold for $8 here in the US are the same as MHG? They're chinese chisels that copy german chisels.
It does indeed and will require sharpening more often. However, its a very quick trip to a high grit whetstone now and again to keep it smartBeing easier to sharpen surely means softer steel
Once upon a time, I guess when Aldi started selling chisels, they did indeed stock MHG chisels rebranded with 'WORKZONE' printed on the handles. I found a set in my dad's shed. They're pretty good, in my unskilled hands.
Current Aldi chisels are indeed Chinesium, and have been for a long time now.
Getting back to the topic in hand, I wouldn't be buying second-hand tools off Ebay or whatever as my first set. Sorry to rain on your parade. The risk of prior abuse having made the chisel unusable is just too much, and then you'd be frustrated trying to understand why they're not sharp, when in fact they simple not sharpenable for you just yet.
For example one thing I never thought of until I read it here was that short chisels have probably been sharpened past where the metal has been hardened, and thus won't retain an edge!
hope this helps.
this must be the best value new chisels
Stubai 9002793307787 Swedish Type 6-26mm Special Wood Chisel Set (6-Piece), Beige/Silver, Medium, Set of 6 Stubai 9002793307787 Swedish Type 6-26mm Special Wood Chisel Set (6-Piece), Beige/Silver, Medium, Set of 6 : Amazon.co.uk: DIY & Tools
Back in the day, 'good to the last inch' was the motto and I've seen nothing to disprove it.I'm a Marples fan.
I still have a full set of the original Marples yellow/red handled chisels which I bought in 1962/63 and which I keep over my bench to this day!
Whether today's Marples chisels are as good as they were when I bought mine remains to be seem but I'd take a guess that they are.
There are comparable brands to Marples I have no doubt but if I had to replace my chisels right now, based on past experience I would take a lot of convincing to go with other brands instead of Marples. I got my first set when I started my apprenticeship at 15 years of age as a church organ builder and they were the recommended chisels at the time. If those tradesmen recommended them then that was good enough.Back in the day, 'good to the last inch' was the motto and I've seen nothing to disprove it.
There are comparable brands to Marples I have no doubt but if I had to replace my chisels right now, based on past experience I would take a lot of convincing to go with other brands instead of Marples. I got my first set when I started my apprenticeship at 15 years of age as a church organ builder and they were the recommended chisels at the time. If those tradesmen recommended them then that was good enough.
I have both the red/yellow handled variety and I have the greed handled variety. The green handled chisels come pretty close to keeping their edge but not quite that of the red/yellow ones in my opinion, but certainly good for day to day jobs.
It may just be subjective on my part of course but properly sharpened, the red/yellow chisels do a fine job and are just that bit more superior.
I'm not sure when your apprenticeship was, but you would likely want to find the same chisels you have rather than buying anything new if you were sticking with marples.
I had two newer sets of "blue chips" sheffield made here and one of the chisels in each was mostly unhardened. I didn't have both sets at the same time, so I couldn't tell you if it was the same chisel in each set. One of the far east versions of "blue chip" chisels was tested by someone on the australian forum, and surprisingly, it was about 60 hardness (which is probably a favorable number for an all purpose chisel - the sheffield chisels that I had were softer than that).
At any rate, once the new blue chip types (chinese made) hit hardwoods, they failed, suggesting that they are just undertempered to reach a hardness target and not actually higher carbon drill rod that would hold up fine at that (the lowest cost simple carbon steel drill rod with just a few additives would make a great chisel as long as it's not at the very low end of "high carbon steels", but the very low end in 0.5-0.6% carbon is far more common than 1% carbon).
The master in this video (George Wilson) made everything in his career with a set of 1960 marples bench chisels. I asked him if they were soft, and he said if anything, they were overhard (one broke and he had to replace it, but it's possible that it was cracked in forging or hardening - maybe probable if it broke). I've got nicer marples sets well after 1960 (box handles, etc), and they aren't remotely close to the same quality as what George describes. I've had to reharden most of them as someone failed to check any and perhaps 2 of the 10 are fully hardened. By that, I don't mean that 2 are probably 60 hardness and the other 58. I mean that they are not hardened at all or near it and can't pare pine at any bevel angle - paring anything at all forms a fast burr from the edge rolling. Once they're rehardened, they're fine.
There are enough older chisels out there that there's no real reason to dabble in new chisels, though. At least until the old ones become absurdly expensive. What I've seen lately here is that the later chisels new in pack sell for more than better earlier chisels.
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