No skills
Established Member
Yeah I know, more sharpening..
Literally playing around with said plane and various bits of wood today and noticed how quickly the edge was being lost - some fracture - some rounding. Now I don't think I've noticed this before as I'm usually abusing pine or similar, today was hardwood end grain (mostly beech but a mixture) which is a fair bit harder.
I could determine a drop off after the first half dozen shavings and another half dozen and the edge was visually damaged.
So the question is am I expecting too much from an iron sharpened at too low an angle or is this blade made of chineseium?
First edge was circa 25 degrees (basic jig) sharpened with diamond stone to 1200 and then stropped with green compound on leather, after seeing what was happening with the cutting edge I did a few cycles of shavings then resharpen (freehand for speed) and ended up with a bevel of around 30 degrees - the edge had no improvement in life over 25 degree.
I've used this plane for a while now and it's probably had a couple of mm of steel removed from the iron over the years from sharpening so it's not exactly on a factory fresh crumbly edge.
It dates from the late 90's so not an old iron but not a new one either - have they been crappy for this long? My other couple of bench planes (60's - 70's record #4's) are sharpened in the same way and seem to hold an edge way better than this even on the odd piece of hardwood.
What's the opinion of the forum?
Literally playing around with said plane and various bits of wood today and noticed how quickly the edge was being lost - some fracture - some rounding. Now I don't think I've noticed this before as I'm usually abusing pine or similar, today was hardwood end grain (mostly beech but a mixture) which is a fair bit harder.
I could determine a drop off after the first half dozen shavings and another half dozen and the edge was visually damaged.
So the question is am I expecting too much from an iron sharpened at too low an angle or is this blade made of chineseium?
First edge was circa 25 degrees (basic jig) sharpened with diamond stone to 1200 and then stropped with green compound on leather, after seeing what was happening with the cutting edge I did a few cycles of shavings then resharpen (freehand for speed) and ended up with a bevel of around 30 degrees - the edge had no improvement in life over 25 degree.
I've used this plane for a while now and it's probably had a couple of mm of steel removed from the iron over the years from sharpening so it's not exactly on a factory fresh crumbly edge.
It dates from the late 90's so not an old iron but not a new one either - have they been crappy for this long? My other couple of bench planes (60's - 70's record #4's) are sharpened in the same way and seem to hold an edge way better than this even on the odd piece of hardwood.
What's the opinion of the forum?