transatlantic":3shp5qgc said:
There is no doubt that you can make a cheap tool perform almost as well as an expensive tool (with fettling), but the key ingredient is a lot of experience.
This argument is valid for some tools, such as planes, but irrelevant with others. It is simply ridiculous, for instance, for a beginner to spend a large amount of money on an expensive chisel, for instance, when it will be precisely as useless when blunt as something bought for a pound from a flea market. If you can sharpen one you can sharpen the other, and when sharp they are exactly as capable as each other. The only two differences are appearance (so what) and how long an edge lasts.
I find it quite irritating when you see people with 20 years+ experience telling newbies who have never used tool X, and are looking to buy one .... "Oh you don't need to buy this or that new, just get a second hand one and restore it"
If the restoration involves nothing more than sharpening, then your irritation is misplaced.
I would argue that restoring even a battered old plane is perfectly possible for a novice. Cleaning up rusty metal and flattening a sole don't require any special knowledge or experience, and aren't in any way difficult. What
is difficult for a newcomer is setting up a plane. In other words, it isn't the restoration which is the issue, it is the adjustment.
What is at issue here is the breakdown in the chain.... In the old days knowledge was passed down by individual to individual, and almost everyone had a passable knowledge of basic woodworking. Need to get a tool working? Easy, ask Uncle Jim or cousin Fred. He'll show you. With woodworking having reduced to a very small niche pass-time, newcomers seeking knowledge don't have the same opportunity to learn from others and become easy prey to the peddlars of gimmicks and unnecessary bits of flashy kit, none of which will produce any better results than a cheaper or second hand tool once the initial edge has worn off. It's therefore a bit frustrating to find newcomers defending these peddlars of bling when the bling itself offers nothing more than false promise.