Derek Cohen (Perth Oz)
Established Member
Hi Jim
I suspect that the previous owner of this chisel did not understand the construction rationale of a Japanese chisel. I do not think that the back was ground so to flatten it. I suspect that the owner did not want a hollow (perhaps thinking that it might affect registration when paring).
As you know Japanese chisels are laminated from layers of very hard steel and either a softer steel or iron. The back of the blade - where the hollow lies - is the hard steel used for the cutting edge.
The hollow is deceptively shallow. The reason it is there is, as again I am sure you know, to reduce the amount of very hard steel so as to facilitate easier flattening of the back and honing of the back of the edge.
As long as there is sufficient hard steel backing to create an edge, the softer backing steel will support this, and all is well. The fact that you can get a sharp edge ... and that this is held! ... is a good sign. All should be well with your chisel. (I have a chisel at home which was flattened like yours, but only more so - a very thin paring chisel - and all the hard steel was removed, leaving nothing to hold an edge).
In the usual life of a Japanese chisel, the back is constantly being honed back, firstly to make the hollow recede and secondly to smooth the rear of the sharp end. The hollow usually lasts the lifetime of the chisel if treated sensibly.
Just be judicious in how you treat the back of this chisel. Only ever use your finishing stone on it to clean up and hone. Avoid anything harsher that may remove more of this steel than necessary. If so done, I am confident yours will be fine for its life.
Regards from Perth
Derek
I suspect that the previous owner of this chisel did not understand the construction rationale of a Japanese chisel. I do not think that the back was ground so to flatten it. I suspect that the owner did not want a hollow (perhaps thinking that it might affect registration when paring).
As you know Japanese chisels are laminated from layers of very hard steel and either a softer steel or iron. The back of the blade - where the hollow lies - is the hard steel used for the cutting edge.
The hollow is deceptively shallow. The reason it is there is, as again I am sure you know, to reduce the amount of very hard steel so as to facilitate easier flattening of the back and honing of the back of the edge.
As long as there is sufficient hard steel backing to create an edge, the softer backing steel will support this, and all is well. The fact that you can get a sharp edge ... and that this is held! ... is a good sign. All should be well with your chisel. (I have a chisel at home which was flattened like yours, but only more so - a very thin paring chisel - and all the hard steel was removed, leaving nothing to hold an edge).
In the usual life of a Japanese chisel, the back is constantly being honed back, firstly to make the hollow recede and secondly to smooth the rear of the sharp end. The hollow usually lasts the lifetime of the chisel if treated sensibly.
Just be judicious in how you treat the back of this chisel. Only ever use your finishing stone on it to clean up and hone. Avoid anything harsher that may remove more of this steel than necessary. If so done, I am confident yours will be fine for its life.
Regards from Perth
Derek