Steve Jones
Member
- Joined
- Dec 23, 2007
- Messages
- 405
I saw the saw sharpener just introduced by Harbor Freight the other week, cheap and I'm tired of paying through the nose for blades that come back from the shop sharp but that last about half as long as new ones, I'm also tired of buying new blades (well, my wallet is).
Ok, it's cheap, nasty, Chinese technology (you'd think I'd have learned by now) but as far as my research has gone, the alternatives (good US built tools for the same job) are in the thousands (not practical, this is the only option).
So I brought one, played with it the other evening, not impressed, I neatly trimmed all the teeth as per the truly lousy instructions, put it on the saw, nope, no better than when I started. Tried the other wheel that comes with it with the same results...
Then I did some more research, found some machinist board where some guy loved this thing, he posted a tutorial with pictures showing his setup, first thing I see is that he left the cap off the cover of the grinding wheel (that's the only way you can get the whole tooth front to touch the wheel stupid! duh).
He also mentioned that the best way to make sure you get the same angle as originally ground was to mark your first tooth (so you know when you're done) with a black marker and then paint the whole front of that tooth with the marker, grind than one a little and if you remove the ink your aligned perfectly.
Also I learned to clean the blade with a good cleaner made for the purpose. and only use the diamond wheel (the thin one)
Setup carefully and sharpened six Festool blades that evening in about an hour - wow! this sucker works - in fact it's a piece of cake - I left off the cover and in the end removed the little stop post thats supposed to stop you grinding too much off, if you hit each tooth with the same pressure for the same time (gently for about a second) you get perfect results and easy setup.
The gadget cost $59.99, The sharpening service charges about $20.00 per blade, I saved $60 that night.
Consider buying one of these things, it sharpens pretty much any sized blade you're likely to have in the shop. Nice to be able to "touch up" that special blade before hacking into some special expensive piece of hardwood.
Now this is not Festool quality stuff, it's cheap and tacky, but it works - it's already paid for itself twice over in my shop.
Ok, it's cheap, nasty, Chinese technology (you'd think I'd have learned by now) but as far as my research has gone, the alternatives (good US built tools for the same job) are in the thousands (not practical, this is the only option).
So I brought one, played with it the other evening, not impressed, I neatly trimmed all the teeth as per the truly lousy instructions, put it on the saw, nope, no better than when I started. Tried the other wheel that comes with it with the same results...
Then I did some more research, found some machinist board where some guy loved this thing, he posted a tutorial with pictures showing his setup, first thing I see is that he left the cap off the cover of the grinding wheel (that's the only way you can get the whole tooth front to touch the wheel stupid! duh).
He also mentioned that the best way to make sure you get the same angle as originally ground was to mark your first tooth (so you know when you're done) with a black marker and then paint the whole front of that tooth with the marker, grind than one a little and if you remove the ink your aligned perfectly.
Also I learned to clean the blade with a good cleaner made for the purpose. and only use the diamond wheel (the thin one)
Setup carefully and sharpened six Festool blades that evening in about an hour - wow! this sucker works - in fact it's a piece of cake - I left off the cover and in the end removed the little stop post thats supposed to stop you grinding too much off, if you hit each tooth with the same pressure for the same time (gently for about a second) you get perfect results and easy setup.
The gadget cost $59.99, The sharpening service charges about $20.00 per blade, I saved $60 that night.
Consider buying one of these things, it sharpens pretty much any sized blade you're likely to have in the shop. Nice to be able to "touch up" that special blade before hacking into some special expensive piece of hardwood.
Now this is not Festool quality stuff, it's cheap and tacky, but it works - it's already paid for itself twice over in my shop.