I have Swiss chisels that were used on one build/ carving. Getting ready for a second and need to know best way to sharpen. I have some Arkansas stones but need some advice. Thanks in advance.
I usually use a 1000 grit then 6000 Japanese water stone followed by a stropping on leather with a fine polishing compound. If the edge is still good, I’ll usually just use the 6000 then strop and sometimes the strop will do it by itself.I have Swiss chisels that were used on one build/ carving. Getting ready for a second and need to know best way to sharpen. I have some Arkansas stones but need some advice. Thanks in advance.
Thanks for your well thought out reply. I have Japanese water stones and will try it. Didn’t think to try it on chisels.I usually use a 1000 grit then 6000 Japanese water stone followed by a stropping on leather with a fine polishing compound. If the edge is still good, I’ll usually just use the 6000 then strop and sometimes the strop will do it by itself.
Unless I really damage an edge and have to start with a pretty course diamond stone.
Various grades of wet sandpaper on plate glass works good too, as well as diamond stones. I’ve just found it better to pick a system and stick with it.
I’ve tried various jigs, etc., but always seem to end up going back to freehand.
Straight chisels are pretty straightforward, pulled back towards you, while gouges also require you to rotate your wrist at the same time, followed by a slip stone to remove the burr from the inside radius. V parting chisels give me fits for some reason.
I’ve found a regular stropping during use will usually keep a good enough edge to keep me going without having to break out the stones during a build.
Like you I’ll go through and sharpen all the used chisels after a build so they’re ready to go and I don’t have to stop building later on for a sharpening session. I don’t go too crazy with it, I’ll work on the edge till it easily slices through a piece of paper, like a sharp knife. Then a little light oiling for rust protection and into the rollup pouch I have all ready for use.
Well Dave since I’m new here I thought I would put it out there. Sorry to bother you.If you use chisels you need to learn to sharpen. Anybody that can post on here can find plenty of instruction with pics. Cheer is a starter:
https://www.woodmagazine.com/woodworking-tips/techniques/skills/sharpening-chisels
I also have one of those (a different brand) and it seems to work pretty good.I used a nifty tool that holds the chisel at a fixed angle while you sharpen them.
None takenPlease don’t take offense. Just making a suggestion.
When I was in my 20s I travelled through Quebec and spent a bit of time with a master carver, Jean-Julian Bourgault. He and his sons used Swiss gouges and chisels working largely in white pine. They frequently went to a buffing wheel loaded with green jeweler’s compound and gave the tools some quick passes when they felt the edges needed it. When I returned home I purchased some Swiss tools, the compound and set up a buffing wheel and never looked back.Sharpening knives and chisels is an art that I haven't mastered. When carving a stock, I start with knives/chisels as sharp as I can get them and stop to resharpen whenever it becomes noticably harder to remove very thin cuts or shavings. Frequent touch ups compensates for my lack of skills.
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