condeesteso
Established Member
I recently got an old Spear & Jackson panel saw 22" 10tpi and it is generally excellent but a little dull around the middle, teeth at toe and heel are excellent and there is no significant fall in tooth height in the central area.
So it needs a sharpen/tune and I'm fine with that but began wondering about exactly what angles etc - I mean tuning it a little to best suit what I will use it for. I read Matthew's (WH) treatise on the topic and generally looked around. The article on Renaissance Woodworker is quite good regarding tuning for different uses, but does not mention 'slope' (where the file rises say 20 degrees pointing towards the cut edge).
The saw in question is a crosscut and will stay that way. I will use it only in hardwoods and prefer cleaner / precise to fast (within reason).
If a fairly standard fleam is 20 degrees, the introduction of slope as much as another 20 degrees would make a big difference to support metal around the tooth tip - should I give this any slope at all, reduce the fleam angle to say 15 degrees (hardwoods)?
Thoughts please.
Meanwhile, here it is - it's a 'Spearior' model which I suppose is good. The cheap ones were known as 'Fearior' :roll:
I can tell it's a good one because it has a lot of words on it. Seriously if James Patterson had this many words he'd call it a book.
O.K. - now let's talk saws...
So it needs a sharpen/tune and I'm fine with that but began wondering about exactly what angles etc - I mean tuning it a little to best suit what I will use it for. I read Matthew's (WH) treatise on the topic and generally looked around. The article on Renaissance Woodworker is quite good regarding tuning for different uses, but does not mention 'slope' (where the file rises say 20 degrees pointing towards the cut edge).
The saw in question is a crosscut and will stay that way. I will use it only in hardwoods and prefer cleaner / precise to fast (within reason).
If a fairly standard fleam is 20 degrees, the introduction of slope as much as another 20 degrees would make a big difference to support metal around the tooth tip - should I give this any slope at all, reduce the fleam angle to say 15 degrees (hardwoods)?
Thoughts please.
Meanwhile, here it is - it's a 'Spearior' model which I suppose is good. The cheap ones were known as 'Fearior' :roll:
I can tell it's a good one because it has a lot of words on it. Seriously if James Patterson had this many words he'd call it a book.
O.K. - now let's talk saws...