Sometimes things don’t go your way.
Today, I was trying to finish up some dismantled saws, and this one seemed easy. Along the way, I ran into the issues that stopped me the first time. It’s a Disston No7, nothing uncommon. But the cross-grain figure of the beech handle encouraged me to proceed. I started with the handle, gluing and shellacking. There’s a chunk out of the upper horn, but I can wait until a nice piece if beech comes my way. The cap screws and the medalion are missing. Not replaceable with standard saw unts because these are domed screws, and the smaller type, for panel saws, to boot. Arrg! Well, what about the blade? There’s a cup at the toe of the blade, which I think indicates it was shortened or at least bent long ago. Lovely patina, of course I went and rubbed it away prospecting for the etch, which didn’t show up. Now I wish I hadn’t. I suspect it was very shallow to begin with, and just got swallowed up in the oxidation. And finally, a tear in the cutting edge near the heal. Probably induces weird vibration when cutting.
So what to do? For now, I’ll just keep it together in hopes of finding a correct medalion and four caps nuts. Then I’ll patch in some beech to the handle. And maybe get creative with a progressive tooth geometry at the heel, to eliminate the tear.
Today, I was trying to finish up some dismantled saws, and this one seemed easy. Along the way, I ran into the issues that stopped me the first time. It’s a Disston No7, nothing uncommon. But the cross-grain figure of the beech handle encouraged me to proceed. I started with the handle, gluing and shellacking. There’s a chunk out of the upper horn, but I can wait until a nice piece if beech comes my way. The cap screws and the medalion are missing. Not replaceable with standard saw unts because these are domed screws, and the smaller type, for panel saws, to boot. Arrg! Well, what about the blade? There’s a cup at the toe of the blade, which I think indicates it was shortened or at least bent long ago. Lovely patina, of course I went and rubbed it away prospecting for the etch, which didn’t show up. Now I wish I hadn’t. I suspect it was very shallow to begin with, and just got swallowed up in the oxidation. And finally, a tear in the cutting edge near the heal. Probably induces weird vibration when cutting.
So what to do? For now, I’ll just keep it together in hopes of finding a correct medalion and four caps nuts. Then I’ll patch in some beech to the handle. And maybe get creative with a progressive tooth geometry at the heel, to eliminate the tear.
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