Paddy Roxburgh
Established Member
This is a follow up on Petey83's post about his AI chisels being out of square. I have decided to post it as a new thread as I don't want to get bogged down in whether he should have made the post, or whether it matters if a chisel is perfectly square or which shoes can be compared to which chisels, this is more about technique when checking for square on anything with a bevel.
When I got in the workshop today I grabbed a square and checked a chisel out of curiosity having read Petey83's post about his chisels. I initially did it as he did in the photo ashley-isle-s-chisels-so-dissapointed-t104570.html and it looked pretty out of whack. I then slightly wiggled the square and it looked much better (although still not perfect). This is due to resting the square against fine lands which are difficult to register the square on. If the the square is not completely in line with the cutting edge of the chisel it will appear to be out of square when it is not due to the bevel dropping away. The same is true with angled cuts when checking the none beveled direction for square.
The correct way to check for square (in my opinion) is to register the chisel with the face towards you (face means the non bevelled side, sometimes referred to as the back) and to move the square up until it reaches the cutting edge. As it is registered on a flat surface the problems of the bevel making it look out of square do not occur.
The same approach should be adopted for checking for square on a bevelled (angled) cut, something I am always careful to do as I have (many moons ago) been caught out by this and spent ages adjusting my table saw, when It was cutting perfectly well.
I am not saying that Petey83's chisels were not out of square, simply that the photo is the wrong way to measure for it. I am making this post in order to prevent people from falling into trap of incorrectly concluding that a bevelled cut or tool is out of square when it is not (or indeed concluding that it is square when it is not)
Paddy.
When I got in the workshop today I grabbed a square and checked a chisel out of curiosity having read Petey83's post about his chisels. I initially did it as he did in the photo ashley-isle-s-chisels-so-dissapointed-t104570.html and it looked pretty out of whack. I then slightly wiggled the square and it looked much better (although still not perfect). This is due to resting the square against fine lands which are difficult to register the square on. If the the square is not completely in line with the cutting edge of the chisel it will appear to be out of square when it is not due to the bevel dropping away. The same is true with angled cuts when checking the none beveled direction for square.
The correct way to check for square (in my opinion) is to register the chisel with the face towards you (face means the non bevelled side, sometimes referred to as the back) and to move the square up until it reaches the cutting edge. As it is registered on a flat surface the problems of the bevel making it look out of square do not occur.
The same approach should be adopted for checking for square on a bevelled (angled) cut, something I am always careful to do as I have (many moons ago) been caught out by this and spent ages adjusting my table saw, when It was cutting perfectly well.
I am not saying that Petey83's chisels were not out of square, simply that the photo is the wrong way to measure for it. I am making this post in order to prevent people from falling into trap of incorrectly concluding that a bevelled cut or tool is out of square when it is not (or indeed concluding that it is square when it is not)
Paddy.