MikeG.
Established Member
Well, not quite. And not quite a Pro-Edge. But it's accurate, took me an hour to make, and I've reground all my chisels on it successfully. Start with my 20 year old belt sander stand:
Add a sturdy frame, braced, triangulated and doweled to the base board:
The guide end and the face of the sander are both absolutely square to the base board, and the angle of the guide is 30 degrees. One worn old 80 grit belt, and an hour later I had reground all of these:
Some of them had been in quite a state after kicking around my building site for 3 or 4 years, although the bench chisels (left hand 5) were almost spot on. This Marples was retrieved from a skip:
That's the reflection of the window you can see, not facets on the bevel. Anyway, there you go. If you struggle grinding a primary bevel on a bench grinder, and if you have a belt sander and some time, you need struggle no more.
Add a sturdy frame, braced, triangulated and doweled to the base board:
The guide end and the face of the sander are both absolutely square to the base board, and the angle of the guide is 30 degrees. One worn old 80 grit belt, and an hour later I had reground all of these:
Some of them had been in quite a state after kicking around my building site for 3 or 4 years, although the bench chisels (left hand 5) were almost spot on. This Marples was retrieved from a skip:
That's the reflection of the window you can see, not facets on the bevel. Anyway, there you go. If you struggle grinding a primary bevel on a bench grinder, and if you have a belt sander and some time, you need struggle no more.