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
Menu

Show posts

This section allows you to view all posts made by this member. Note that you can only see posts made in areas you currently have access to.

Show posts Menu

Messages - jsawduste

#1
General Tormek Questions / Re: Tormek Expectations
January 05, 2025, 06:13:51 AM
Ken,
Thank you for the response. Been out of town and am just now catching up on things.

I understand your comments. There was plenty of questions and speculations in the original post.

Now that the holidays are over. The best course of action is to do just as you said. Take a tool to the wheel and learn how to use the machine.

The Jet does have the stone grader to change from coarse to fine. That said, I'm not sure how much I'll use it with the Diamond wheel in place.

Definitely will use water with an additive to protect and maintain the Diamond.

In a nutshell, I'm curious of the sharpness level obtained from the use of Jet/Tormek jigs and honing.  Compared to using the Shapton ceramic stones. 

The Jet is going to open new doors to sharpening tools that are difficult to jig on flat stones. I see the two systems complimenting each other rather than replacing.

As I get more experience. there will be better questions forthcoming.

Thank you for the warm welcome !!
#2
General Tormek Questions / Tormek Expectations
December 31, 2024, 07:55:16 PM
For Christmas I received the Jet JWS 10.

From what I've been able to research both in person and via the internet. The Jet version is very comparable to the T-8. The support bar interchanges as does the wheels.

My usage is primarily woodworking tools. I'm not much of a turner so we are talking plane blades and chisels.

Having had a Supergrind many years ago. I opted for the DF 250 (600 g) right off. The mud, speed of cutting and general maintenance of the AL/OX wheel was something to avoid.

Taking advantage of holiday pricing. Several Tormek jigs have been added as well. The SE77, MB102, SVD110, SVS50 and the Jet Profiled leather wheel.

Currently I use several jigs with DMT 300/1000 Diamond. Then move on to Shapton ceramic all the way up to 16,000. Don't know what grit standard these companies use so direct comparison is difficult.

Herein lies my question. The tools I'm planning on sharpening range from modern A2/O1 all the way down to 1800's era molding plane blades. 

Flat plane blades are easy enough to jig. The single bevel skew blades are a different story. Thus the attraction of the multi jig.

What level of sharpness can I expect with the Jet/Tormek compared to the Shaptons ?

Is the DCF @ 600 g a good compromise to recreate a bevel on say A2 ? I have other jigs to create micro (secondary) bevels on the Shaptons with repeatability if the Tormek won't sharpening to that Shapton level.

Would I be better to switch to the CW220 then strop by hand or switch back to the leather wheel ? 

What is a good approach for the 1800's steel ?

Sorry for all the questions but my application needs are quite wide and I don't know how best to approach.
Perhaps changing to the DC 250 Diamond wheel with the CW 220 ?

Lastly, I'm vision impaired. Thus making use of jigs is paramount. Spinning carbide and bodily appendages don't get alone well. Nor do dull tools.

Thank you for all the help and patience.