I did the same thing. Got hold of some old saws at an auction and practiced on them. I'm still not great at it, but getting better. I'm particularly pleased with the resharpening of a tenon saw I did so that I could dedicate it to cross cuts.I practiced on a couple of 4tpi ripsaws bought from carboot for peanuts.
A simple method or sharpening fine-toothed saws is to find a hacksaw blade of the same tpi as the saw being sharpened. Clamp both in the vice with the tooth profiles aligned but the hacksaw blade slightly lower- just a mm or so. File each tooth down until the file hits the hardened hacksaw blade.Can anyone recommend a service to re cut and sharpen the teeth on a tenon saw? I’m in the Essex area.
I like the sharpie trick blacken all the teeth then you see which teeth you've filed once your in the rhythm it's just moving gullet to gullet, it's more a matter of feel and using the same repetive motionsSomething else to consider - the teeth are small. My old eyes struggle to see them. So good lighting is essential. I've even taken to wearing magnifying spectacles when I work on saws.
Enter your email address to join: