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Hand Axe - Downwindtracker2 - 03-17-2019

I've always called them hand axes, they are flat on one side with the bevel on the other, like a one handed  small broad axe. I picked one up at the fleamarket today for $10, rusty with a couple of notches , like someone was cutting a screw. This one has red epoxy suggesting Plumb, but no red stain. I would like to know about them to see if I could track it down. Google didn't help much.


RE: Hand Axe - AHill - 03-18-2019

Did you mean to post a pic?


RE: Hand Axe - Downwindtracker2 - 03-18-2019

After four google searches I found it, it is a Plumb, an earlier pre red stain one ,https://clutchaxes.com/product/septls18411554-broad-hatchets/

Next question , is the cutting edge parallel to the handle , or does it angle down like my fleamarket find.. Should a hewing hatchet be straight like chisel or are have some camber ?


RE: Hand Axe - Bill_Houghton - 03-19-2019

On the Plumb I own with what looks to be the original bevel, the edge is straight and parallel to the handle that would be there if it had a handle.


RE: Hand Axe - Downwindtracker2 - 03-22-2019

Last night I dug out my copy of Leonard Lee's The Complete Guide to Sharpening. This trip into axes has been more than worth while.After reading his section on axes, I decided to finish up my sharpening on my hewing hatchet, a no-name Plumb ??. They also been called a bench axe as well as a carpenter's hand axe.I dulled another, that makes three files,this time instead of a couple of well used ones, a new made in USA Nicholson file on the bevel, no more facets and it's exactly 25 degrees. This rehab of a $10 axe is getting expensive. Then on to the pitted flat side with the 6x48 belt sander and a new 80 grit belt. . The pits weren't that deep, so I wasn't taking that much. I exposed a line in the metal maybe 3/4" from my new edge. I wouldn't have expected that in a modern tool. From a manufacturing point , a single steel head would be easier to make. Straight cheeks and epoxy Permabond, what are we looking at? a '70s tool?.

At that level of hardness, it's waterstones. I used a 1000 grit. Straight across, 25 degree and a 2 degree back bevel . That 2 degree sort of happens naturally when doing the flat side. I brushed against lightly it, I now am wearing a bandaid on my finger, chuckle. It off to equipment dealer for a sheath. We still have logging around here.