During the build of my acoustic guitar I decided that I needed a paring chisel to carve the heel. Rather than give in to my natural impulse to buy yet more tools, I decided to make one. And here it is:
It's made from oil hardening tool steel (i.e. O-1, or gauge plate) with a beech handle and mild steel for the ferrule. The overall length is 15 1/2" and the width is 1". The blade tapers from 6mm to 3mm cut using a milling machine in several stages before hardening. About 50mm of the tip is hardened only. I used a decent sized propane torch to get this up to temperature quickly (the colour of cooked carrots) and held it there for about 5 mins, then dunked it into proper quenching oil. I tempered it at 180 deg C for an hour in our fan oven.
Unfortunately, whilst inserting the tang I managed to split part of the handle, still I plugged that with some superglue and it seems fine. I turned the handle from an old desk leg.
In use the chisel cuts really well and I reckon it cuts and retains an edge just as well as any of my old cast steel Marples et al chisels. The only issue is that it's quite heavy, but the thought of making a bevel edge chisel was a step too far for me.
This is the heel before final sanding and blending in to the rest of the neck:
Clive
It's made from oil hardening tool steel (i.e. O-1, or gauge plate) with a beech handle and mild steel for the ferrule. The overall length is 15 1/2" and the width is 1". The blade tapers from 6mm to 3mm cut using a milling machine in several stages before hardening. About 50mm of the tip is hardened only. I used a decent sized propane torch to get this up to temperature quickly (the colour of cooked carrots) and held it there for about 5 mins, then dunked it into proper quenching oil. I tempered it at 180 deg C for an hour in our fan oven.
Unfortunately, whilst inserting the tang I managed to split part of the handle, still I plugged that with some superglue and it seems fine. I turned the handle from an old desk leg.
In use the chisel cuts really well and I reckon it cuts and retains an edge just as well as any of my old cast steel Marples et al chisels. The only issue is that it's quite heavy, but the thought of making a bevel edge chisel was a step too far for me.
This is the heel before final sanding and blending in to the rest of the neck:
Clive