Hello everyone,
I ordered a KJ-140 jig for grinding thin, wobbly blades (like from carpet cutting knives) and when I received it today, it is curved and the gap in the middle is 1,4 mm wide.
Can someone please tell me if this is intentional or did I receive a faulty product?
Greetings
Eric
Eric,
I have the predecessor products (the SVM-100 and SVM-140). Both of them are the same way.
When I use them, the ends "flex" out so that there is a consistent edge against the blade.
Rich
Eric,
I agree with Rich. With traditional hand woodwork, glue ups for tabletops are usually "sprung". This means being planed so that the two ends of the board protrude ever so slightly beyond the middle of the board. When the boards are clamped together, the middle is compressed enough to be together and the ends are under pressure.
This is notquite the same as the knife jig jaws; however, extra pressure on the ends of the jaws will make the clamp more secure.
Ken
PStoTormek: This would be good to include in the instruction sheet.
Thanks Rich and Ken!
I will tinker around some more with the jig. It seems I need to shim it, even cranking it uncomfortably hard won't close the gap enough and the blade isn't fully supported in the middle, creating a small "smile" in the grind.
Eric
Eric
Please try sharpening with much less pressure. The smile is very likely not caused by the jig.
Hello HaiPaio,
thanks for your comment. Almost the whole blade is not fully supported in the jig, which makes the blade move and making it slightly wider in the middle (smaller edge angle). The gap, after cranking the screw down, is 1,25 mm while the blade is 0,6 mm thick. Only the outmost parts contact the blade. Thanks to Rich and Ken I could confirm the clamp is in spec, so no big (or even small) deal. Some cardboard was enough to solve that.
Eric