ali27":1takl0op said:I think it would be great if a quality jig would be made
that can sharpen a backbevel of about3-5 degrees
without having to remove the blade from the jig while sharpening
the front bevel.
I've found that a back bevel of only a few degrees results in an edge that seems sharper than an edge honed on the same stone with the blade back kept flat. By "seems sharper" I'm referring to the results of the thread-cutting tests I've done. I realize there's some dispute over whether the thread test results reflect actual sharpness and I don't want to start up a discussion of that, but my subjective impression based on feeling the edges, shaving hair on the back of my hand, using the thumbnail test and actually planing wood also suggest that a back bevel increases the level of sharpness.bugbear":39v59rst said:ali27":39v59rst said:I think it would be great if a quality jig would be made
that can sharpen a backbevel of about3-5 degrees
without having to remove the blade from the jig while sharpening
the front bevel.
Why do you want such a small back bevel?
BugBear
David C":3yd2a1si said:Ali
The ruler is a simple aid which gives a back bevel of 2/3 of one degree.
A one mm thick ruler would give about double
David
Why do you want such a small back bevel?
BugBear
David C":9hor8gyp said:I grind plane blades at 23 degrees.
Enter your email address to join: