ED65":1li3ugrr said:Rob, if you need a honing jig think about making one of these. A quick-and-dirty one will take you about ten minutes. They're the ideal solution if you need a jig right now but actually they work as well or better than any guide you can buy.
They have numerous advantages over conventional wheel guides in that no portion of the jig rides on the stone, making it much easier to use the full length and prevent hollowing. And for chisels with their much smaller reference surface one of these is much more stable than any of the clones of the Eclipse guide which slavishly copied the narrow central wheel, which are prone to rocking side to side.
Read more about the jig, along with more than you ever wanted to know about sharpening, on Brent Beach's site here.
ED65":1357xee5 said:Rob, if you need a honing jig think about making one of these.
Yojevol":d4p8ntae said:Why use a jig? Craftsmen never used them before they were invented and plenty of us still don't.
I've seen a whole generation of woodworkers wasting millions of hours and vast amounts of money on complicated modern sharpening fashions and all the kit, to no obvious advantage. If only they had persisted a little longer with freehand! I guess they get put off by the gadget salesmen and the dodgy gurus.custard":1ytvtzbi said:Yojevol":1ytvtzbi said:Why use a jig? Craftsmen never used them before they were invented and plenty of us still don't.
I've never quite got that logic.
I've seen newbies waste hours and hours getting absolutely nowhere with free hand sharpening. ........
Because it is quicker, cheaper and easier without.So why not extend that same principle to sharpening and get jigged up with a honing guide?
Jacob":3k4p5sb2 said:I've seen a whole generation of woodworkers wasting millions of hours and vast amounts of money on complicated modern sharpening fashions and all the kit, to no obvious advantage. If only they had persisted a little longer with freehand! I guess they get put off by the gadget salesmen and the dodgy gurus.custard":3k4p5sb2 said:Yojevol":3k4p5sb2 said:Why use a jig? Craftsmen never used them before they were invented and plenty of us still don't.
I've never quite got that logic.
I've seen newbies waste hours and hours getting absolutely nowhere with free hand sharpening. ........Because it is quicker, cheaper and easier without.So why not extend that same principle to sharpening and get jigged up with a honing guide?
Rob_H":1pr2o7tx said:Just saw a video on YouTube where David Charlesworth puts the chisel into an small metal guIde to get the angle right for sharpening his chisel. Does anyone know which one he is using, please?
Why use a car?Yojevol":27qxyljd said:Why use a jig? Craftsmen never used them before they were invented and plenty of us still don't.
Way ahead of you, bro...PAC1":27qxyljd said:I have Beer and popcorn can some one get the BBQ lit (hammer)
Why?Tasky":ymaq1kbj said:........For my part, I needed a jig just to ensure my iron edges were square in the first place, else I'd have been hand-sharpening them into skew blades of some kind!....
Yes that's it in a nutshell.DTR":2x6r44fp said:Unless you had some kind of plinth that matched the stone's height...
That's certainly a big part of it.transatlantic":2rhs3kf3 said:Woodworking is a minefield of skills. As a beginner I'll take any help a jig can provide.
Don't forget that most people spend a few hours a week at their hobby. That's not a lot of sharpening time to build up the skill.
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