MBcarpentry":3oxhje6l said:
Looking to treat myself to a new set of chisels, looking a a few different offerings but not sure which one to go for been looking at the Veritas pmv 11, lie Nielsen socket chisels and some Japanese chisels ( not real high end ones) all are around the same sort of money (around £250 for a set of 5) are any of you guys using any of these chisels and what are your thoughts? or using something else that is of nice quality for the same sort of money?
In my opinion, it comes down to what you want the chisels to do and how you like to do this.
For example, Japanese bench chisels have the best steel - even the mediocre ones hold a sharp edge longer than just about any Western chisel. However they are designed to be used with a steel hammer (gennou). There are Japanese paring chisel (slicks) which are pushed, but then they are never struck. Further, most Japanese bench chisels are not designed for dovetailing. However you can find some that are. I've been using Koyamaichi dovetail chisels for at least 10 years, and they are superb at edge holding and beautifully made for their price (about the same as a LN or LV chisel).
Of the Western chisels, the ones I most use are the PM-V11 Veritas bench chisels. There hold an edge extremely well - not quite as long as the Koyamaichi, but twice or three times that of any A2 chisel. Importantly, they are well balanced and comfortable in the hand, may be pushed or hit, and are superb with dovetails.
I've used the LN on occasions, and have a set of old Stanley #750s from which they came. I did not like the Stanley/LN handle, and made my own longer handles. While I consider the comfort when using a chisel more important than the steel, per se, I work with hard woods and the steel becomes important as well. For this reason, the A2 of LN would be an issue. I have a set of Blue Spruce detail/dovetail chisels in A2, and they hardly get used anymore. Yet they have the finest handles I have used. The BS are light, however, and this will polarise users.
Regards from Perth
Derek