G S Haydon
Established Member
- Joined
- 24 Apr 2013
- Messages
- 1,667
- Reaction score
- 223
I like oilstones too. Nice in a cold workshop and it helps keep rust from tools.
Boxes are a very good idea. If they fall they don't bounce. I've bought secondhand stones that have the endgrain blocks and I'm confident the stone was owned by a professional or serious amateur. When I've made my own I didn't add the blocks.
Keep the India, a lovely good value stone. In addition, one fine stone is good too. You might not need it but they don't cost much secondhand.
To grind the tool I would consider a mechanical option. I prefer a water soaked wheel. It's slower than a bench grinder but the particulate that gets thrown into the air from a bench grinder isn't something I like.
You don't have to go the Tormek route, Screwfix have Scheppach versions, their biggest version is still much less than the Tormek and fine for home woodworking.
Boxes are a very good idea. If they fall they don't bounce. I've bought secondhand stones that have the endgrain blocks and I'm confident the stone was owned by a professional or serious amateur. When I've made my own I didn't add the blocks.
Keep the India, a lovely good value stone. In addition, one fine stone is good too. You might not need it but they don't cost much secondhand.
To grind the tool I would consider a mechanical option. I prefer a water soaked wheel. It's slower than a bench grinder but the particulate that gets thrown into the air from a bench grinder isn't something I like.
You don't have to go the Tormek route, Screwfix have Scheppach versions, their biggest version is still much less than the Tormek and fine for home woodworking.