ccarrolladams
Member
- Joined
- Apr 14, 2010
- Messages
- 1,451
Since I joined The FOG we have discussed the need to have bits and blades sharpened. In a recent discussion a member mentioned that he had been pleased with the firm sharpening his planer knives, so he asked them to also sharpen some Festool blades. Apparently the service technician said that it was just as well he noticed that the teeth of that Festool blade are not equally spaced and therefore would have damaged his machine.
Well, I am not clear which of us earn a living working with wood and who works with wood for the joy and without any concern for return on investment.
When I was a child helping my grandfather Adams who I called "AhPa" he was a wealthy retired executive who decided to go back to methods used circa 1800 to build furniture. He had collected excellent hand tools of that period. So from an early age I understood the vital importance of keeping cutting tools appropriately sharp. Long before I bought a power tool and found I could make money building things from wood, I took great pride in my ability to sharpen hand plane irons and chisels.
As the scope of my woodworking business expanded I realized I needed a relationship of trust with the outside firm sharpening my saw blades, jointer/planer knives and router bits. In the days before carbide inserts became common, sometimes I questioned the benefit of having steel blades sharpened versus replacing them. When I moved to Southern California I was lucky that my power tool dealer introduced me to an experienced and talented sharpening service specializing in the professional woodworking trades. That fellow bought machines to sharpen carbide when it reached the market. Unfortunately 40 years ago he retired.
By then I had a business relationship with a large grinding service who handled end mills and other metal working cutters. When my woodworking sharpener retired, I asked them about doing that for my cabinet shop. It turned out they had been sharpening woodworking tools for the movie industry since the 1920s and moved into metal working as the aircraft industry expanded. Before I bought my first Festools that grinding firm owned and knew how to use CNC saw grinding machines ideal for sharpening Festool blades.
Personally I would run from anyone who could pick up a blade and not notice the teeth being unevenly spaced. There are many good reasons why Festool blades are designed as they are. Lots of other blades also have unevenly spaced teeth, so by now I fail to understand how a sharpening service could stay in business without learning how to grand such blades to factory-new condition.
Well, I am not clear which of us earn a living working with wood and who works with wood for the joy and without any concern for return on investment.
When I was a child helping my grandfather Adams who I called "AhPa" he was a wealthy retired executive who decided to go back to methods used circa 1800 to build furniture. He had collected excellent hand tools of that period. So from an early age I understood the vital importance of keeping cutting tools appropriately sharp. Long before I bought a power tool and found I could make money building things from wood, I took great pride in my ability to sharpen hand plane irons and chisels.
As the scope of my woodworking business expanded I realized I needed a relationship of trust with the outside firm sharpening my saw blades, jointer/planer knives and router bits. In the days before carbide inserts became common, sometimes I questioned the benefit of having steel blades sharpened versus replacing them. When I moved to Southern California I was lucky that my power tool dealer introduced me to an experienced and talented sharpening service specializing in the professional woodworking trades. That fellow bought machines to sharpen carbide when it reached the market. Unfortunately 40 years ago he retired.
By then I had a business relationship with a large grinding service who handled end mills and other metal working cutters. When my woodworking sharpener retired, I asked them about doing that for my cabinet shop. It turned out they had been sharpening woodworking tools for the movie industry since the 1920s and moved into metal working as the aircraft industry expanded. Before I bought my first Festools that grinding firm owned and knew how to use CNC saw grinding machines ideal for sharpening Festool blades.
Personally I would run from anyone who could pick up a blade and not notice the teeth being unevenly spaced. There are many good reasons why Festool blades are designed as they are. Lots of other blades also have unevenly spaced teeth, so by now I fail to understand how a sharpening service could stay in business without learning how to grand such blades to factory-new condition.