cody1325
Well-known member
Recently got started on sharpening a Kobalt (made in Mexico) 1.25 lb. hatchet so that I could use it to save my good USA (Kelly/True Temper, Collins, Estwing, Council) and European (Finnish Fiskars, German Ochsenkopf) from chips. I was using an old Nicholson USA mill ******* file, and I noticed it cut the steel much quicker than I'd noticed my other Nicholson files--with this same low end Kobalt included.
I'm assuming the cheap axe had terrible steel that probably tests way softer than the quality axes. However, old USA Nicholson files are known to be excellent quality. That being said, all but my farmer's file (modern Brazil Nicholson) are hand-me-down USA Nicholson--and are always the first step to sharpening axes (mostly new/blunt or secondhand/well-used--I then switch to a DMT coarse/fine sharpener). Maybe this one was less-used or something.
That being said, I think I will probably avoid Kobalt/Lowe's axes from now on. Gonna get a second lightweight Fiskars hatchet, and put the Council Pulaski on order.
I'm assuming the cheap axe had terrible steel that probably tests way softer than the quality axes. However, old USA Nicholson files are known to be excellent quality. That being said, all but my farmer's file (modern Brazil Nicholson) are hand-me-down USA Nicholson--and are always the first step to sharpening axes (mostly new/blunt or secondhand/well-used--I then switch to a DMT coarse/fine sharpener). Maybe this one was less-used or something.
That being said, I think I will probably avoid Kobalt/Lowe's axes from now on. Gonna get a second lightweight Fiskars hatchet, and put the Council Pulaski on order.