jimi43
Established Member
For years now I have browsed the Internet seeking out the wide variety of toolmakers who fashion quality items from wood and metal.
When I use a tool I like to feel I'm holding a piece of art and a part of history...preferably both.
I had taken a slight break from the whittling over the last year pointing telescopes to the sky and building an observatory so insomnia has set in.
This turned out to be a very very good thing as I was browsing Fleabay at some unearthly hour of the morning and espied this beauty....
This behemoth was hand made by Steve Knight of Knight Toolworks, Oregon...USA back in 2005...
Steve has had universal acclaim in toolmaking circles since he started making planes back in the 1990s but his company appears to have bitten the dust recently...his website points nowhere.
So at 7am when I found this as a Buy it Now for £110 I couldn't believe my luck and snapped it up there and then. This was yesterday and it arrived TODAY!! Amazing!
It's actually a birthday present from my dear wife Annie but she was blissfully unaware of this fact at the time and threatened to hide it until my birthday...until she saw what that entailed and gave up gracefully!
Anyway...it's HUGE. I'm talking silly huge.
Here she is (Bertha by the way...what else!!)....lurking behind my David Barron jointer which I thought was big enough...
It's interesting to see the different design ideas from around the world and amusing to note this is characteristic of other things.
Whilst the Barron is very reminiscent of a sleek British sports car...the Knight jointer is more akin to a huge Cadillac. Unashamedly huge and capable of wiping out a passing articulated lorry at 100 yards!
Interestingly Bertha sports a Japanese iron....
I love this. I like the marriage of East and West and can't wait to see how this performs. It certainly is thick enough...
She also has a closeable mouth, furnished very simply by the adjustable front wedge:
At the moment this is set way back...
The wedge has a unique flying-V shape...
So...now to test her...after I get rid of the tiny chips on the iron and set the mouth....and will be back to report on whether she works as good as she looks...
Cheers
Jimi
When I use a tool I like to feel I'm holding a piece of art and a part of history...preferably both.
I had taken a slight break from the whittling over the last year pointing telescopes to the sky and building an observatory so insomnia has set in.
This turned out to be a very very good thing as I was browsing Fleabay at some unearthly hour of the morning and espied this beauty....
This behemoth was hand made by Steve Knight of Knight Toolworks, Oregon...USA back in 2005...
Steve has had universal acclaim in toolmaking circles since he started making planes back in the 1990s but his company appears to have bitten the dust recently...his website points nowhere.
So at 7am when I found this as a Buy it Now for £110 I couldn't believe my luck and snapped it up there and then. This was yesterday and it arrived TODAY!! Amazing!
It's actually a birthday present from my dear wife Annie but she was blissfully unaware of this fact at the time and threatened to hide it until my birthday...until she saw what that entailed and gave up gracefully!
Anyway...it's HUGE. I'm talking silly huge.
Here she is (Bertha by the way...what else!!)....lurking behind my David Barron jointer which I thought was big enough...
It's interesting to see the different design ideas from around the world and amusing to note this is characteristic of other things.
Whilst the Barron is very reminiscent of a sleek British sports car...the Knight jointer is more akin to a huge Cadillac. Unashamedly huge and capable of wiping out a passing articulated lorry at 100 yards!
Interestingly Bertha sports a Japanese iron....
I love this. I like the marriage of East and West and can't wait to see how this performs. It certainly is thick enough...
She also has a closeable mouth, furnished very simply by the adjustable front wedge:
At the moment this is set way back...
The wedge has a unique flying-V shape...
So...now to test her...after I get rid of the tiny chips on the iron and set the mouth....and will be back to report on whether she works as good as she looks...
Cheers
Jimi