Bluekingfisher
Established Member
I have over the past several years collected and been given some vintage Pad saws. Presently I have around 6 or so. I do not use them on a daily or even on a regular basis, just wondered if people are still using them?
The other day I decided to sharpen the blades on a couple. ( I have two with hacksaw blades fitted for unruly nails or screws). It struck me the blades, all of which seem to be as old or nearly as old as the handle have a very aggressive tooth pattern. The rake angle was 15degrees on all of them, filed in a rip pattern with a heavy set, leaving a kerf of around 1.5 - 2 mm. I appreciate the amount of rake makes for a less aggressive cut, however the combination of blade thickness, tooth set and tooth size got me wondering what and when would the tool have been used for.
I am aware they are also often called keyhole saws, perhaps for rough carpentry work, not fine furniture I would have thought.
Perhaps some had their tooth geometry altered (less set, cross cut pattern?) dependant on the use.
In any case, a couple spend their days hanging in my tool cabinet for me to gaze at occasionally.
So - Are they still by UKWS forum members or do any "older" craftsmen have fond memories of them in use?
David
The other day I decided to sharpen the blades on a couple. ( I have two with hacksaw blades fitted for unruly nails or screws). It struck me the blades, all of which seem to be as old or nearly as old as the handle have a very aggressive tooth pattern. The rake angle was 15degrees on all of them, filed in a rip pattern with a heavy set, leaving a kerf of around 1.5 - 2 mm. I appreciate the amount of rake makes for a less aggressive cut, however the combination of blade thickness, tooth set and tooth size got me wondering what and when would the tool have been used for.
I am aware they are also often called keyhole saws, perhaps for rough carpentry work, not fine furniture I would have thought.
Perhaps some had their tooth geometry altered (less set, cross cut pattern?) dependant on the use.
In any case, a couple spend their days hanging in my tool cabinet for me to gaze at occasionally.
So - Are they still by UKWS forum members or do any "older" craftsmen have fond memories of them in use?
David