Chocolate Teapot ?

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Sideways

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I was gifted a few unused carpenters pencils and sharpener the other day and have just used this sharpener for the very first time.
You can see the result below next to some sharpened by hand with a stanley knife as usual.

I can't help but think whoever invented the daft gadget didn't understand why a carpenter's pencil is made with a rectangular lead in the first place. To me at least, it is genuinely as useful as a chocolate teapot and has just gone straight in the bin.

A square lead can be sharpened in many different ways from razor edged to durable, but if you need a point like a round lead, just carry a round pencil instead of a not very good sharpener to fake one.

20250222_185138.jpg


Am I missing something ?
And are there any other chocolate teapots out there ?
 
I'd wondered how these sharpeners sharpened a carpenter's pencil.
I must have been very young when dad showed me how to do that with his penknife.
I had one of those posh carpenter's sets in a wooden box back then.
I think I knocked a lot of nails into scrap wood!
 
Definitely rubbish, I used to just use the nearest chisel, stanley knife , marking knife, belt sander, bit of sandpaper, rough brick or paving slab, razor blade, block plane, etc. etc. all probably better than those sharpeners.
Now I use a Pica pencil which I somehow don`t loose.
 
I like the Pica (and Hultafors) long nose pens and pencils too, but you don't look a gift horse in the mouth :) They'll come in handy sometime.
A belt or disc sanding machine IS great for carpenters pencils 👍🏻
 
I have a carpenter pencil sharpener someplace in the shop that sharpens them correctly, that is with a flat wide point. Naturally I can't find it at the moment but it's the same as the one in this review. https://www.penciltalk.org/2009/04/keson-cp2-carpenter-pencil-sharpener It works and consistently from sharpening to sharpening. I got it from Lee Valley ages ago and they don''t sell them anymore.

Pete
 
I never use the sharpeners, but to play Devil's advocate, they are just a tool to give you a pointed tip on a pencil that won't roll away on a roof etc, I'd rather use a knife, but it's a personal choice
 
I’ve tried a number of different sharpening systems, and now use a Faber-Castell sharpening jig (£126 Amazon) on 6000 grit pencil media which gives me a point I’m happy with……..I’m getting my coat😛
 
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