cjp
Established Member
Hi all,
I'm looking to sharpen up my chisels and irons. While I have perfected the art of sharpening some old chisels I have using just an oilstone - the better set I have are just too damn tough and take forever to do by hand. And I don't fancy to the plane irons by hand either.
As such I'm looking at a bench grinder. So far I'm torn between going the cheaper route - £66 for the Axminster AWDWSG Wetstone Grinder (http://bit.ly/92BUu8) - but on top of that I'd need a couple of jigs.
Or going the more expensive route and getting a Worksharp system (Rutlands have one for £199 http://bit.ly/bF64no + free leather honing kit).
Though I only woodwork in evenings and weekends, I plan on doing a lot of it and so the last thing I really want to do is spend too long sharpening tools. I also plan on using a lot of hand tools before moving onto power tools.
As such I'm leaning towards the Worksharp as it requires no water, so less mess and has all the preset angles I'll need.
So perhaps I've answered my own question. But any thoughts anyone? I'm well aware I may just be getting the newbie draw towards shiny expensive systems which perhaps are more than I need. But it does seem like a good deal!
Cheers,
Charlie
I'm looking to sharpen up my chisels and irons. While I have perfected the art of sharpening some old chisels I have using just an oilstone - the better set I have are just too damn tough and take forever to do by hand. And I don't fancy to the plane irons by hand either.
As such I'm looking at a bench grinder. So far I'm torn between going the cheaper route - £66 for the Axminster AWDWSG Wetstone Grinder (http://bit.ly/92BUu8) - but on top of that I'd need a couple of jigs.
Or going the more expensive route and getting a Worksharp system (Rutlands have one for £199 http://bit.ly/bF64no + free leather honing kit).
Though I only woodwork in evenings and weekends, I plan on doing a lot of it and so the last thing I really want to do is spend too long sharpening tools. I also plan on using a lot of hand tools before moving onto power tools.
As such I'm leaning towards the Worksharp as it requires no water, so less mess and has all the preset angles I'll need.
So perhaps I've answered my own question. But any thoughts anyone? I'm well aware I may just be getting the newbie draw towards shiny expensive systems which perhaps are more than I need. But it does seem like a good deal!
Cheers,
Charlie