woodbloke66
Established Member
Following on from the current thread on Accurate Angles, 'dzj' mentioned that ;
'Precise hand tools are often also costly'
...to which MikeG sought clarification and some sort of definition maybe? The interesting discussion that followed started me thinking (difficult at the best of times ) about an example(s) which might go some way to explain 'djz's statement.
The thought that occurred to me was regarding chisels, which Mike mentioned specifically somewhere in the thread. If one were to look at the Veritas and LN offerings, looking just at the long edges of the blade;
...to my mind, these are precision chisels capable of precise work, especially where one is used to pare away the internal corners of a dovetail. I make the assumption that the machining and grinding process to obtain that very fine edge along the blade is tricky to set up and therefore costly.
Compare those to a Marples chisel chosen at random from a G search ...
...and we can see that the grinding along the side is much less precise, so you wouldn't choose these for delicate dovetail work. As the grinding is 'cruder' ( for want of a better term) along the edge, I again make the assumption that it's a less expensive process and thus the tool is less expensive, notwithstanding the other features of the LN & V chisels which add to their cost.
There are probably other examples, but this one seemed to me to be pretty straightforward - Rob
'Precise hand tools are often also costly'
...to which MikeG sought clarification and some sort of definition maybe? The interesting discussion that followed started me thinking (difficult at the best of times ) about an example(s) which might go some way to explain 'djz's statement.
The thought that occurred to me was regarding chisels, which Mike mentioned specifically somewhere in the thread. If one were to look at the Veritas and LN offerings, looking just at the long edges of the blade;
...to my mind, these are precision chisels capable of precise work, especially where one is used to pare away the internal corners of a dovetail. I make the assumption that the machining and grinding process to obtain that very fine edge along the blade is tricky to set up and therefore costly.
Compare those to a Marples chisel chosen at random from a G search ...
...and we can see that the grinding along the side is much less precise, so you wouldn't choose these for delicate dovetail work. As the grinding is 'cruder' ( for want of a better term) along the edge, I again make the assumption that it's a less expensive process and thus the tool is less expensive, notwithstanding the other features of the LN & V chisels which add to their cost.
There are probably other examples, but this one seemed to me to be pretty straightforward - Rob