YorkshireMartin
Established Member
Hello all.
Having purchased a few Narex (8101) chisels a month or two ago, I've now started to use them regularly. They have been used only in scandinavian redwood, for both chopping and paring. They have been sharpened without a micro bevel and are razor sharp. They cut very well indeed when freshly sharpened, like a knife through butter. They are sharpened from 250 through 1200 grit on diamond plates, then polished at 15k grit.
As far as I know, I haven't misused them. The trouble is, the edge is getting damaged in use, frequently. Not just dulling, but chips are appearing in the cutting edge, necessitating a fair amount of grinding to remove. This is unexpected, especially as I'm using softwood. The work they are doing has been a fair amount of cross grain for shoulders, but I still wouldn't expect to see 0.25mm chips in the leading edge after paring a single tenon, which is whats been happening in the worst case. No knots were present.
I'm using a wooden mallet and I would say I'm going relatively easy on them, not just bashing away like theres no tomorrow. I don't mind sharpening, I just didn't expect it would be so frequent.
I heard good reports on these, so I'm surprised. Having nothing to compare them to I'm a bit stuck. Is it worth buying a high end chisel to test against, or is there something else I could do to test my technique? I'm a beginner, so I suspect my technique first.
Many thanks.
Having purchased a few Narex (8101) chisels a month or two ago, I've now started to use them regularly. They have been used only in scandinavian redwood, for both chopping and paring. They have been sharpened without a micro bevel and are razor sharp. They cut very well indeed when freshly sharpened, like a knife through butter. They are sharpened from 250 through 1200 grit on diamond plates, then polished at 15k grit.
As far as I know, I haven't misused them. The trouble is, the edge is getting damaged in use, frequently. Not just dulling, but chips are appearing in the cutting edge, necessitating a fair amount of grinding to remove. This is unexpected, especially as I'm using softwood. The work they are doing has been a fair amount of cross grain for shoulders, but I still wouldn't expect to see 0.25mm chips in the leading edge after paring a single tenon, which is whats been happening in the worst case. No knots were present.
I'm using a wooden mallet and I would say I'm going relatively easy on them, not just bashing away like theres no tomorrow. I don't mind sharpening, I just didn't expect it would be so frequent.
I heard good reports on these, so I'm surprised. Having nothing to compare them to I'm a bit stuck. Is it worth buying a high end chisel to test against, or is there something else I could do to test my technique? I'm a beginner, so I suspect my technique first.
Many thanks.