Hello,
I had an idea if it would be beneficial to produce a chisel, that will have two perpendicular level vials in the handle. That way I would know that I have positioned the chisel in a way that is perfectly plumb without any additional tools.
It might be useful if I want to chop out wood at an angle (e.g. for making non laminated hand planes) . First I will draw a reference line on the wood. Then I will fix the wood in the vice, so that the reference line is plumb to the workbench / floor. Then I will position the chisel and read both perpendicular levels, so that the chisel is plumb in both axes and I will chop out the wood.
My question is if this feature could be useful for some other chisel tasks as well or it would be technically impossible /demanding (e.g. vials would break or will get off precision if the handle is beaten by the mallet, etc.). It might look ugly as well.
This is just an idea that might not be practical at all
I had an idea if it would be beneficial to produce a chisel, that will have two perpendicular level vials in the handle. That way I would know that I have positioned the chisel in a way that is perfectly plumb without any additional tools.
It might be useful if I want to chop out wood at an angle (e.g. for making non laminated hand planes) . First I will draw a reference line on the wood. Then I will fix the wood in the vice, so that the reference line is plumb to the workbench / floor. Then I will position the chisel and read both perpendicular levels, so that the chisel is plumb in both axes and I will chop out the wood.
My question is if this feature could be useful for some other chisel tasks as well or it would be technically impossible /demanding (e.g. vials would break or will get off precision if the handle is beaten by the mallet, etc.). It might look ugly as well.
This is just an idea that might not be practical at all