Cooper
Established Member
I have recently made 3 tipped tools from purchased tips (5 for £15) and materials lurking in my shed. I am so delighted with them I'd like to share them with you.
Today I have had the most fun in ages. I was given several pieces of pear tree a few years ago but had no use for them at the time and stacked then in the yard. I noticed them yesterday and thought they would be badly cracked but they looked OK. I sawed off several lengths about 45cm and have prepared them as blanks of projects. I thought I'd rough them with a tipped tool and true them with the skew. That was until I snagged the skew on a knot. I switched to the tip I call the curved square and "whistled" through it. I achieved a far better finish that I could have with the skew. I intended only to do one today but had so much fun being showered in bark and woodlice in the end I prepared 4.
The tools are nothing to write home about, as I'm no sort of metal worker and all the materials were bits of scrap. However I'm please with my £3 pound tools.
Today I have had the most fun in ages. I was given several pieces of pear tree a few years ago but had no use for them at the time and stacked then in the yard. I noticed them yesterday and thought they would be badly cracked but they looked OK. I sawed off several lengths about 45cm and have prepared them as blanks of projects. I thought I'd rough them with a tipped tool and true them with the skew. That was until I snagged the skew on a knot. I switched to the tip I call the curved square and "whistled" through it. I achieved a far better finish that I could have with the skew. I intended only to do one today but had so much fun being showered in bark and woodlice in the end I prepared 4.
The tools are nothing to write home about, as I'm no sort of metal worker and all the materials were bits of scrap. However I'm please with my £3 pound tools.