DannyEssex
Established Member
I understand that pedder, the picture was just for display purposes
Thanks again
Thanks again
I messed about with a practice saw this morning, using a hacksaw blade as the template. It seem ok, not as daunting as I was expecting it to be. Bugbear kindly sent me some images to print off, so will try that out. I have just won a saw vice on ebay and will picking that up Thursday, then I will order some new files from WH.
I have a question about starting the first file cut. Am i best to start in the middle of the template teeth?
And jointing
does the saw plate HAVE to be perfectly flat, ie no daylight whatsoever if held up to a square face?
Agreed - it's better to start with a straight tooth-line, not only for marking out from the template but it makes it easier to keep a constant rake angle when forming the teeth if you are new to saw sharpening. "Breasted" saws have a convex tooth line & it takes a bit of experience & concentration to maintain rake angle when forming or re-sharpening teeth on these, especially if the breasting is extreme, as on "floor" saws. However, there is no advantage whatever (imo) in breasting backsaws, straight works just fine...Does it HAVE to be absolutely flat?
No. but if you're cutting using a hacksaw blade as the master, it helps. Then you can get the whole blade done in one pass. If the toothline is hollowed - as it frequently is - you have to keep re-matching the heights between master ans slave every few inches.
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