Old Tool Video

I helped a friend move their parents last week and it turns out her grandfather built bi-planes. Nobody wanted his old tools so they gave them to me since they knew I would put them to use. Picked up a handful of saws, 2 saw sets, saw vice, a couple yankee screwdrivers a stanley #10 rabbet plane, 5 1/2 jack plane, couple braces and a full set of augers in great shape as well as other odds and ends. It was clear that these tool were well maintained. I have collected most of these tools already so now i have to go through them and figure out which ones to keep. I like them all! The hardest part about using hand tools is learning how to sharpen them and keeping them sharp. Once you learn that, they are pleasure to use. My belief is that most people who have tried hand tools used ones that were dull or not setup properly leaving them with a belief that they are difficult to use. Once I learned how to sharpen saws and planes it changed the way I do work in my shop dramatically.
 
Neal

I completely agree with you. Using hand tools is as much about sharpening as it is actually using the tool. My solution used to be to send everything out to get sharpened. Then I started acquiring the tools to sharpen and am finding the sharpening process to be quite interesting and rewarding. After years of dulling Forstner bits and setting them aside I finally taught myself to use a diamond file. The shearing noise they make cutting wood is music to my ears. I recently bought a drill grinder. Just last night I completed sharpening a batch of fifty twist drill bits (1/2" to 1 1/4") that I used to send out. Not only was it expensive but I had to box them up and go to the post office to mail them to a sharpening company in North Carolina. A hassle I no longer have to deal with. I'm finding it hard to find sharpening services near me so now I do it in-house or ship it elsewhere for stuff I don't have a means to do myself.
 
When I was first getting into woodworking (soon followed by decoy carving) in the days before the information overload of the internet and youtube, my two patron saints were Roy Underhill and Norm Abram, through their tv programs and then books. The problem was they were at polar ends of the spectrum. I was very drawn to Roy's use of 18th century and older tools. But Norm made me feel like I could build anything, with little skill and the right tool, as long as that tool had a power cord coming from it. I was caught in the middle, and am still fighting that battle. I gradually evolved into a hybrid approach. I only recently bought a DeWalt planer, after years of flattening the mating surfaces of my decoys with a handplane. But that and my bandsaw are the only power tools involved in my carving. I experimented with both Foredom and Dremel rotary tools but they just didn't feel right to me. I do use more power tools in my woodworking, but still apply beading, roundovers, dados, rabbets and grooves with hand or wooden molding planes. And for my retirement, I've purchased the tools for hand-cutting dovetails and am committed to learning that skill, attempting other handtool skills as well. For me, it's always been about enjoying the journey rather than arriving at the destination. I'm even considering a muzzleloading fowling piece next!
 
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