YorkshireMartin
Established Member
I've just started to hand cut my tenons for my first ever project. I purchased a £12 Irwin tenon saw, thinking it would do the job as all it needs to do is cut tenons, which it is designed for, right? Oh dear me.
They do saw a bad workman blames his tools but I've gone from cutting a line with the Irwin which looked like the edge of a waney oak board, to being able to cut to within a fraction of my marks, overnight. All due to a change in saw. The difference is utterly unbelievable. Not only does it take literally a quarter of the time to make a cut, it cuts straight, even in my inexperienced hands. The consequence of course is less time spent paring the shoulders and cheeks.
My first tenon took me 1 hour to cut with paring. My second, about 5 minutes.
Anyone else considering a cheap tenon saw, life is too short!
Whoever it was from here that said that the "go to" saw for beginner tenon cheeks is the Veritas rip cut, thank you!
They do saw a bad workman blames his tools but I've gone from cutting a line with the Irwin which looked like the edge of a waney oak board, to being able to cut to within a fraction of my marks, overnight. All due to a change in saw. The difference is utterly unbelievable. Not only does it take literally a quarter of the time to make a cut, it cuts straight, even in my inexperienced hands. The consequence of course is less time spent paring the shoulders and cheeks.
My first tenon took me 1 hour to cut with paring. My second, about 5 minutes.
Anyone else considering a cheap tenon saw, life is too short!
Whoever it was from here that said that the "go to" saw for beginner tenon cheeks is the Veritas rip cut, thank you!