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German Silver, Stainless Steel and Ebony - Printable Version

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German Silver, Stainless Steel and Ebony - KlausK. - 07-16-2016

Hi Netters,

we've made a fine joinery saw that is different to our usual ones. It has a spine of German silver instead of brass. The steelish colour of this alloy goes well with the SS screws and with the ebony handle as we find. The downside is the difficult slotting of this alloy. Our machinist refuses to do this any more at .012 slots since he messed up a few bits while slotting it. So this saw probably will be one of three.

It's a 10" saw pitched at 18 tpi rip.













This saw will have its shop in the UK.

Klaus


Re: German Silver, Stainless Steel and Ebony - MarvW - 07-16-2016

Jewelry. Too nice to be used. Should be on display to demonstrate what the Two Lawyers are capable of.


Re: German Silver, Stainless Steel and Ebony - cputnam - 07-16-2016

MarvW said:


Jewelry. Too nice to be used. Should be on display to demonstrate what the Two Lawyers are capable of.



+ 1 - What Marv said.


Re: German Silver, Stainless Steel and Ebony - Arlin Eastman - 07-16-2016

If these saws are not so collectable now I would say your saws will be that way and a whole lot more in the future. Someday I hope to have a carcass and dovetail saw. Of course I will have to win the lottery first or sell a lot of my turnings.

I will have to say that you will have to make more of the backs like that!!!!

Arlin


Re: German Silver, Stainless Steel and Ebony - Philip1231 - 07-16-2016

Sehr Gut!


Re: German Silver, Stainless Steel and Ebony - eg54string - 07-16-2016

Nice. The ebony and German silver are beautiful. As is the sculpting. I like the length, also.


Re: German Silver, Stainless Steel and Ebony - Timberwolf - 07-16-2016

..+1


Re: German Silver, Stainless Steel and Ebony - Derek Cohen - 07-17-2016

Klaus, you have a first class sense of the aesthetic ... that is a stunner.

I understand that, theoretically speaking, thinner plates are preferred for fine cuts. However, is there a noticeable difference between 0.012 and 0.015? If not, surely the latter would be better to use?

Regards from Perth

Derek


Re: German Silver, Stainless Steel and Ebony - KlausK. - 07-17-2016

Derek Cohen said:



I understand that, theoretically speaking, thinner plates are preferred for fine cuts. However, is there a noticeable difference between 0.012 and 0.015? If not, surely the latter would be better to use?






Good point, Derek. The ultra thin blade requires a clean push stroke, it's less forgiving than thicker blades. It may take a short time to get familiar with. But you will be rewarded. There is a noticeable difference to our thicker bladed dovetail saws that we offer with .016 and .020 blades. If both saws are pitched equally, the .012 saw wins the contest. It cuts quicker but the higher speed doesn't count too much. It's the easier and smoother cut of the thin blade that makes the difference. When I experienced this difference the first time with our very first thin bladed saw, I fell in love with it immediately.

There's some roumors that .012 bladed saws won't last very long. I can't confirm this. If that was the case, we certainly would gave got some reclamations. We had none so far in this regard.

The .012 bladed saws are designed to cut thinner stock up to 3/4", typically for drawers. So these saws are fine pitched (about 16 up to 20 tpi). And they have a limited blade depth up to 1 1/4". Both features combined with the fact that the blades are glued into the spine (what supports the stiffness of the blade) make this special saw to be surprisingly sturdy. I'm sure that someone who is used to saw with hand saws will like it. To a beginner we wouldn't recommend it wholeheartedly.

Klaus


Re: German Silver, Stainless Steel and Ebony - Pedder - 07-17-2016

Derek Cohen said:

However, is there a noticeable difference between 0.012 and 0.015?




Hi Derek,

0.012" (0.3mm) and 0.016" (0.4mm) are complete different animals. 0.012" feel like falling into the cerve. Remember the first sawing with a japanese saw? It's a bit like that.

With the same downsides. You have to let the saw do the work. Light touch only. If you press it, it will wander.

Cheers
Pedder