News:

Welcome to the Tormek Community. If you previously registered for the discussion board but had not made any posts, your membership may have been purged. Secure your membership in this community by joining in the conversations.
www.tormek.com

Main Menu

VERY Old School Sharpening

Started by RichColvin, May 21, 2020, 03:14:05 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

RichColvin

André Jacob Roubo published a great picture on how the old guys used to make their own tool sharpeners.  I am SO happy we now have Tormeks!

---------------------------
Rich Colvin
www.SharpeningHandbook.info - a reference guide for sharpening

You are born weak & frail, and you die weak & frail.  What you do between those is up to you.

John_B

We had one of these when I was growing up that was left in an out building by the previous owners. I vaguely remember using it on occasion

We lived in a farm house that was built in the late 1800's. My parents bought it after he returned from WWII.
Sharpen the knife blade
Hone edge until perfection
Cut with joy and ease

Ken S

#2
The introduction of these sharpening wheels sparked what is normally called "The Hundred Years War" with the bench stone flat sharpeners who fought against the sins of hollow grinding...... Some of us are still fighting these wars.

Ken

Interesting drawing, Rich. Just what you need to go with your rose lathe.

Jan

#3
Rich, I find even more interesting the old picture displayed on your Sharpening handbook site. http://www.sharpeninghandbook.info/indexAbout.html
The grind stone is not a wheel but an oval shaped grind stone. It is said that the supervising man commands the axe grinder to hold the axe so that the resulting grind is convex.

I studied it on a simple model, but it remains a riddle for me.
https://www.dropbox.com/s/6uquqq1gkoyptrw/OVAL%201.jpg?dl=0
https://www.dropbox.com/s/amvas2zqyg0yffc/OVAL%202.jpg?dl=0

Jan

kwakster

#4
Never seen such an oval stone before, but how it works is clear to me.
The narrower ends of the stone grind the upper part of the bevel, while the wider midsections form the apex.
The oval shape of the stone takes care of a smooth transitioning, thereby forming the convex shape.
Very clever btw.
Maybe an idea for Tormek.

Jan

It is said that swords were sharpened in this way in the Middle Ages.

Jan