Sharpen This
(By Christopher Schwarz) Read EbookSize | 25 MB (25,084 KB) |
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Last checked | 12 Hour ago! |
Author | Christopher Schwarz |
If you want to be a better woodworker, you need to learn to sharpen. If you want to be a better sharpener, you need to stop paying so much attention to tertiary bevels and carbide formations in steel and start paying attention to the wood. If the wood is cut cleanly, then your tools are sufficiently sharp. If the wood is torn out and covered in tiny scratches, then you need to sharpen up your tools.
And then keep sharpening your tools until you get the desired results.
"Sharpen This" is a 120-page pocket book on how to get great edges, regardless of the sharpening system you choose. It is about what is important: Creating a sharp edge quickly with a minimum amount of equipment.
It is not a book about becoming a sharpening expert. It is instead about becoming an expert at sharpening.
It can be tough to stay on this practical path. Every woodworking catalog and discussion forum is packed with new equipment and ideas to create better edges. It’s tempting, especially as a beginner, to try some of the interesting sharpening approaches that float around the internet. Or to sample some exotic new diamond-impregnated paper. What can it hurt? And what if it helps?
"Sharpen This" is an attempt to help woodworkers stay grounded. To think about want you want to leave behind when you're gone. Is it a chest filled with immaculately cared-for tools and a few nice pieces of furniture?
Or do you want to leave behind hundreds of pieces of furniture that demonstrate – through an iterative process – that you grew in the ability to harness beauty and bring it into this world? (Plus, a chest of tools that are in serviceable shape.)
"Sharpen This" covers the entire life cycle of an edge tool, from setting up a new tool, to repairing chipped edges, grinding, honing and polishing. It helps you decode the confusing world of sharpening media by focusing on particle size (in microns) instead of commercial jabber-jock.
And, most importantly, it helps you get back to work at the bench as quickly as possible. Because the process of making tools dull is far more enjoyable than making tools sharp.”