warbiespig
Member
Looking into wood lathe tool sharpening systems what would people recommend.
Arnold9801":21pa68o5 said:I was about to create a new thread asking for advice on which sharpening set up and saw this thread!
I already have the tormek and am about to upgrade on my woodturning sharpening system. I was about the buy the jig to attach to the tormek for gouge sharpening and then decided to hang back and do a bit more research. I am wondering if it would be best to perhaps use the bench grinder option instead as my wear on the tormek grind wheel will increase and the cost of a replacement wheel will be quite expensive.
Scheppach do a bench grinder with a belt linisher as well, and then there is the Record bench grinder with a 40mm white wheel. I was thinking of the ruby stones rather than the white ones. What are the views and opinions of others?
Regards
Tormek Turning tool Jigs used on the Tormek soft wheels result in excessive Stone wear due to small contact area, does mean a lot of dressing if you also want to work on chisels and plane blades.jim1950":23t55vgw said:I'm looking into the same thing, I've got the tormek and can't make my mind up tormek jigs for tuning tools of Pro edge. Help please.
Arnold9801":15h8xqs5 said:The Robert system does seem to be the rolls Royce option but I've just been reading about the slow speed bench grinders combined with white stones. Axminister and creusen seem very good. Anyone got views on these options as an alternative to the £340 Robert Sorbey option? Although slow speed bench grinders are expensive for what they are, it seems cheaper than "Bob Sorby!"
Sheptonphil":1v6ape4h said:Arnold9801":1v6ape4h said:The Robert system does seem to be the rolls Royce option but I've just been reading about the slow speed bench grinders combined with white stones. Axminister and creusen seem very good. Anyone got views on these options as an alternative to the £340 Robert Sorbey option? Although slow speed bench grinders are expensive for what they are, it seems cheaper than "Bob Sorby!"
By the time you’ve added jigs (if you use them) the slow speed grinders aren’t really that much cheaper. I went the stone route, wished I’d never done it. The real problem comes when you want to reshape, then sharpen. Easy with Proedge, the grits are too fine for reshaping with white, and they need constant dressing else the develop wavy surface and deep grooves. Don’t fight it, just shell out once and never think about it again except smiling every time you walk away with a sharp gouge in 30 seconds.
jim1950":fcisa7cd said:I'm looking into the same thing, I've got the tormek and can't make my mind up tormek jigs for tuning tools of Pro edge. Help please.
Enter your email address to join: