I wish I knew this sooner

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ENCurtis

ENCurtis

6 ай бұрын

Recently I broke my favorite spokeshave--and one of my favorite hand tools--at a live teaching event. It was dramatic. It was funny. It was devastating. So, I got a new one. And we're gonna restore it to glory today. Hallelujah.
I have a PATREON! If you want to support this channel and join a great community of woodworkers, you can do so here:
/ encurtis
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www.bonfire.com/store/encurtis/
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Items I use in this video (some are affiliate links which help sponsor this content):
600 grit wet/dry sandpaper: amzn.to/3RQfgiO
Granite flattening slab: amzn.to/41PzIVz
Spray adhesive: amzn.to/48FQ0Tb
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Glue:
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Titebond III Wood Glue: amzn.to/3MVnG6j
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Liquid Hide Glue: amzn.to/3PhZEEW
TotalBoat Epoxy:
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Liberon Finishing Oil: amzn.to/3kXkIEf
Danish Oil (alternative): amzn.to/3Njlabs
Liberon Beeswax: amzn.to/3Jm2yFN
Turpentine: amzn.to/3SWFznB
Mineral Spirits (alternative): amzn.to/3oKU83h
Power Tools and Accessories:
Festool Domino: amzn.to/47YEty0
Table Saw Blade - Woodworkers II: amzn.to/42bIOLa
My favorite trim router: amzn.to/3LbCbTF
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Sharpening:
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Angle Setting Jig Plans: www.lie-nielsen.com/pages/dow...
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Lie-Nieslen Honing Guide: www.lie-nielsen.com/nodes/423... guide
Sandpaper for Flattening: amzn.to/3Jor73F
You can stay up to date with my work here:
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Пікірлер: 192
@michaelholmstrom7677
@michaelholmstrom7677 6 ай бұрын
I was there when you broke your spoke shave, the look on your face when it happened. Priceless.
@ENCurtis
@ENCurtis 6 ай бұрын
I was literally in shock 😳🤣
@josephlathrop1914
@josephlathrop1914 6 ай бұрын
@@ENCurtis you shouldn't have been cast iron isn't steel its vulnerable to fracture from impact. Ive lost 2 cast iron pans by snapping off the handle. Every time you hit it on the edge instead of tapping the steel you where probably creating micro fractures in the cast iron
@GibClark
@GibClark 6 ай бұрын
👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻I ended up with a couple of yardsale finds... then bought the Lie Nielsen about 4 or 5 years ago...... still questioning that decision.... of course I'm a jackass of all mediums... but the round handles give you no registration and the throat opening seems too small. Shaving jam up, constantly am digging out. Perhaps one day I'll remember to bring it to camp to be educated 😊
@lorddarphyve
@lorddarphyve 6 ай бұрын
I was there too. The shock was palpable!
@woodshopsquared3183
@woodshopsquared3183 6 ай бұрын
Not everyone knows this trick but set your blade at a slight angle so you have a side that cuts heavy and the other light
@SecureBread
@SecureBread 6 ай бұрын
Eric forgetting words always makes me feel better about the time I forgot the word for cylinder and called it a tall circle
@sodomybroom
@sodomybroom 6 ай бұрын
I'd wager that tapping it on your work bench causes more metal fatigue than adjusting it with your hammer. When you hold the spoke shave loosely in one hand and the hammer in the other, tapping them together causes a small sharp shockwave/vibration similar to pool balls hitting each other. That energy is pretty gentle and dissipates in multiple directions kind of like a tuning fork decaying, but in an instant. When you swing the tool down toward your work bench, you're putting momentum into the mass of the whole tool. When it comes to an abrupt stop on that corner, the mass of the handle wants to continue downward and puts a large torsional force into a narrow point on the weakest part of the tool. An intuitive way to think of this is if you take a long thin strip of wood and swing it against the corner of your bench, it'll snap in two very easily. If you hold that same stick up in the air and beat on it with a hammer it's much harder to make it break. Hope this helps your new (to you) favorite spoke shave last the rest of your life!
@twcmaker
@twcmaker 5 ай бұрын
I like this. I don't hit my Spokeshaves on the bench. I didn't even know it was a thing until 30 minutes ago. Tap with a 3oz hammer. A lot less effort and more control.
@terrygleeson8480
@terrygleeson8480 6 ай бұрын
Eric, I recently retired as cabinet maker and used 64’s all my 48 years at the bench. My absolute favourite spokeshave. However I’ve never tapped the casting to adjust. I do however tap the blade. It’s worked for me for 48 years. All my eight 63’s & 64’s are in great condition with the exception of the paint I’ve worn off them from extended use as a chair maker. Just change the tap method.
@theMrFouldsy
@theMrFouldsy 6 ай бұрын
FYI, a score is 20.
@terrygleeson8480
@terrygleeson8480 6 ай бұрын
I stand corrected @@theMrFouldsy
@twcmaker
@twcmaker 5 ай бұрын
I'm with you on that
@mattk6827
@mattk6827 2 ай бұрын
This my favorite spokesha... *grabs different one* _you_ are now my favorite spokeshave. lol
@TomBuskey
@TomBuskey 6 ай бұрын
I have some old tools that were brazed and they work well. I like that it was valued enough that they took the time to repair it.
@HHH-nv9xb
@HHH-nv9xb 7 күн бұрын
Already having healthy plane collection. I was thinking of starting a collection of these bandaged tools. Like you said, " it was valued enough that they took the time to repair it". A die maker helped me repair a chip on a SW # plane, where you can't even see the repair.
@StefanTarras
@StefanTarras 2 ай бұрын
Content is better than half way OK! Top notch stuff. I love your things.
@Rodrat
@Rodrat 2 ай бұрын
I have a weird way to adjust these and I've never seen anyone do it before. What I do is I set it on a known flat surface. With the blade loose. I then slightly raise the back up and let the blade fall then I tighten it down. If it's too far out I I loosen it and lower the back of the shave closer to the surface and then tighten again. Works 100% of the time for me and I never have ever had to hit it with a hammer. It also takes me seconds.
@trevorleprevost9547
@trevorleprevost9547 6 ай бұрын
The number 64 spoke shave was produced from 1879 to 1963. By the markings on the blade it's probably from the 1950's
@mikecolo2158
@mikecolo2158 6 ай бұрын
Thanks for another fun and educational video. One more thing on the oil....there is just something about the smell of 3-in-1 on fresh metal. Smells like work is gonna get done.
@mikeking7470
@mikeking7470 6 ай бұрын
Did you know that an American piano maker used to recommend 3-in-1 oil for their wood surfaces?
@twcmaker
@twcmaker 5 ай бұрын
🤔 Now you've said that.. Its true. It does smell like works going to get done.. Or it's already done
@gregdeitrick6073
@gregdeitrick6073 6 ай бұрын
Send it to This Old Tony and bet him he can't fix it. Or make a copy.
@davidathay5793
@davidathay5793 6 ай бұрын
Love your style and your attitude towards woodworking.
@roystewart4826
@roystewart4826 Ай бұрын
Great stuff Eric a fun explanation !👍👏
@tabitha2706
@tabitha2706 6 ай бұрын
Yay for Saturday mornings, and my weekly ENCurtis fix :-)
@inregionecaecorum
@inregionecaecorum 6 ай бұрын
I have one of those, I think I shall treat it with a great deal of care from now on. Mine has indentations on the front and rear and says made in Eng.
@rickhayhoe
@rickhayhoe 4 ай бұрын
Another down-to-earth vid by Erik. Timely too, because I inherited an old, never used but neglected Record A151 several years ago from my father and will soon want to use it on an upcoming project. I'm also ready to restore a late 1940's Stanley Bailey Number 65 block plane in not bad condition inherited from Dad. Very useful video, Erik. Thanks!
@rizzidepizzi
@rizzidepizzi 6 ай бұрын
Well, this was inspriring. I've had a newer Stanley spokeshave laying in a drawer for years. Cheap crap, or so I thought. Yesterday, after this video, I took it out and tuned it, turned the blade the other way around 🤦, and voilà! A good, working spokeshave, beautiful curls and surface. So thanks, and keep up the good work!
@TenaciousGeebs
@TenaciousGeebs 6 ай бұрын
Awesome video. Inspired me to get one albeit not the same iteration and made in England. Arrived today and I have spent a lot more time restoring it than I initially thought. Blade in particular was in worse shape than it looked in the photos. But it is now done and works like a dream. £20 well spent.
@anthonyseiver7000
@anthonyseiver7000 6 ай бұрын
Spokeshaves are so underrated. They can shape curves with ease and leave a finish ready surface with a sharp iron. Instead of using a steel hammer to set the iron use a small hardwood mallet. I made mine from Ironbark a tough as nuts Aussie hardwood - specifically for setting wooden plane irons.
@MemelordSupreme
@MemelordSupreme 6 ай бұрын
That's what I was going to say too. The metal on metal contact certainly increases the chance of breakage and causing micro fractures to occur since it's such a hard surface it's extra brittle. A hardwood mallet or hammer would certainly be better for longevity. While the wood is super hard it's nowhere near as hard as the hardened steel hammer head. All you want to do is put enough energy into the handle to scootch the iron. Wood would certainly do this perfectly fine.
@johnbernard6683
@johnbernard6683 6 ай бұрын
Went to my local granite slab company and bought a sink cutout from their graveyard for $5. Even had my choice of colors!
@mcozturk
@mcozturk 6 ай бұрын
Enjoyed the video, thank you! Please make a basics video on why/when and how you use a spoke shave.
@214rwoz
@214rwoz 6 ай бұрын
Thank you for all your time and effort. I thought, in the beginning, OMG its a box opening! Where is this channel going ? Say it isn't so, but it turned out to be a really good video. Thanks again 1in 7.
@Bloodangel1977
@Bloodangel1977 6 ай бұрын
When you kept putting up those "we apologize for continued broadcast issues" screens when you stumbled your words I,was dying! Very nicely done man. Education with some comedy is a winning formula!
@5ElementsWoodworking
@5ElementsWoodworking 6 ай бұрын
Watching this video felt a lot like when my 10 year old explained 500 episodes of One Piece to me. ,-) // Good to see old tools getting some love. I often buy new because I don't trust myself to bring a tool back to usefulness. Thanks for the video!
@Brassblitz
@Brassblitz 4 ай бұрын
I stopped at a countertop place a couple years ago and asked if they'd sell me an off-cut. Guy just gave me a 1.5" thick granite cut out from a sink. It's a great size and flatter than I can measure.
@HHH-nv9xb
@HHH-nv9xb 7 күн бұрын
A lot of shops will give it away too. You have to pick from a pile to chase down the "rectangle" pieces.
@toddthenormallifeofacrazyv3107
@toddthenormallifeofacrazyv3107 4 ай бұрын
Only like 5 minutes in and made me think of another KZbin channel I watch. Hand tool rescue. Dude does amazing work. Maybe consider having yours fixed and having two
@z4zuse
@z4zuse 6 ай бұрын
6:41 that bump, hitting the bench sounded like there is a small crack in the body
@woodnotestudio
@woodnotestudio 6 ай бұрын
Awesome that you were able to get a new one.
@vandermore
@vandermore 6 ай бұрын
Thanks for this. I have an old Dunlap that is similar in style and wasn't sure how to restore and set it up. Now I do!
@gregsarsons1221
@gregsarsons1221 6 ай бұрын
Absolument enjoyed the video with the intermissions; we all have those days. Looking forward to the next video … !
@ImOnAJourney
@ImOnAJourney 6 ай бұрын
5:32 I’ve bought tools from eBay. I always contact the seller, ask a few questions about the tool I’m looking at, ask for 4 or 5 more photos from specific angles, ask if the seller has tried to use it, most of them say no, or “I played with it for a bit but it’s not really my kind of tool”. So I buy it, he says he’ll make sure it’s all there, put it together the right way, wrap it and send it tomorrow. The box arrives in a few days, I open it, I pull the tool out … and I usually laugh my funny bone off because it’s totally put together wrong! And then I say to nobody, “No wonder it’s not your kind of tool, the way you have put it together is not at all how the tool maker designed it to work!” LMFAO! I’m glad you were able to replace your 94 so quickly! Thanks for the clean up/pretend restoration!! PS Start Making channel sent me your way. I’ll hang around for awhile … maybe longer 😉
@leighdurrant9116
@leighdurrant9116 6 ай бұрын
I get my words muckin fuddled 😅
@jimrosson6702
@jimrosson6702 6 ай бұрын
Another great video glad to see you found a replacement for the broken one.hopefully you can have the broken one repaired. Thanks for sharing the steps on restoring the spokeshave
@myerscok
@myerscok 6 ай бұрын
Brilliant Erik. Thanks for posting. You’ve inspired me to try restoring one. I’ve just purchased a 64 from eBay for £10.79 ($13.73) incP&P. I would really love to see a video from you about setting up and using the spokeshave. It’s a tool that doesn’t get much coverage on KZbin. Ken from Southport UK
@RossTFarnsworth
@RossTFarnsworth 6 ай бұрын
Weld it, that will be an adventure you will not forget...
@joeleonetti8976
@joeleonetti8976 6 ай бұрын
The one exception I found to being able to read the company name on the blade to determine the orientation was the Ron Hock spokeshave kit.
@Spills51
@Spills51 6 ай бұрын
Must be awesome to have you as a teacher man! Great to be able to get some of that knowledge in todays age through things like KZbin....just wish I could pick your brain in real time.... Thanks for the vid....its nice to see some restoration cause no doubt most have to do it at some point and time.
@Wolf-yw7en
@Wolf-yw7en 6 ай бұрын
You should have been named Tony. Quite the woodworking showman. Really enjoyed that. Lol! And get me started on Schmutz. My mother is Austrian. She see’s schmutz everywhere.
@paulfriedman4767
@paulfriedman4767 6 ай бұрын
Get a Stanley 51. Same adjustment, maybe a little bit more metal in the casting? Now you've got me scared I'm going to break it :(
@kevinmeachem2138
@kevinmeachem2138 6 ай бұрын
Recently bought my first spokeshave and am very grateful for any info on how to make it work.
@xtjoy
@xtjoy 6 ай бұрын
My favorite thing about learning in this field is having you as my favorite woodworking buddy that I can turn to when I start crying because it’s not going my way 😅 or to share a project that came together!
@ENCurtis
@ENCurtis 6 ай бұрын
That’s friendship right there, my dude 😎
@russrockino-rr0864
@russrockino-rr0864 6 ай бұрын
I love seeing the Made in the USA stamp on the blade. Thanks for sharing!
@mandowarrior123
@mandowarrior123 2 ай бұрын
Anneal it once a year, its only about 700 degrees. It's just work hardening. Bit of time with a blow torch and it'd be good as new. Make the important bits glow red with a torch, let it cool in air.
@edwardnorek8506
@edwardnorek8506 6 ай бұрын
Funny this is your topic for today. Just had a friend of mine cleaning out his attic this week and gifted me with a Stanley No. 64 and a Stanley No. 65. The 64 is usable but needs to be cleaned up and restored the 65 is in the same condition but missing the blade. Both should be nice additions once I get them touched up
@KOutOfMyYard
@KOutOfMyYard 6 ай бұрын
Man alive.. I love seeing a driver of the struggle bus bud! Really like the longer form.. maybe check what’s in that ol grin mug😮 as always.. you are awesome
@paulmaryon9088
@paulmaryon9088 6 ай бұрын
Thanks dude for another great video, last week I broke my pincers/nail pullers, couldn't believe it, they were only 40yrs old!! Still good excuse to go tool shopping, every cloud has a silver lining.
@ianwalters3485
@ianwalters3485 6 ай бұрын
Great video, I've just finished restoring 2 Stanley spoke shaves & a cabinet scraper... took me a while, but I over fussed on preparing the blades... but then I enjoy that too ( OCD)😅
@Richardwright-we6rv
@Richardwright-we6rv 6 ай бұрын
best video yet! big thumbs up from the UK!! 👍
@94Toyota
@94Toyota 6 ай бұрын
Pro tip if you or you know people in the trades you can find treasures like the granite top I got a couple years ago. Thanks for the video Erik
@briancollins2230
@briancollins2230 6 ай бұрын
There are days it's tough for me to English too. Especially when the coffee hasn't kicked in. But the video, as always, was great. Thank you tell next week. Keep your cup full my friend
@TimberworksTables
@TimberworksTables 5 ай бұрын
I just received my first spoke shave, the same model, beat up and well loved, given as a gift from a woodworker buddy of mine. I'm really looking forward to learning how to use it. My first project it'll be used on? Shaping the handle of the first dead blow mallet I'm building.
@henrikmanoochehri4613
@henrikmanoochehri4613 6 ай бұрын
I use a small (5 oz?) plastic faced mallet to tap the heel of the blade/iron gently.
@JeffFontecchio
@JeffFontecchio 6 ай бұрын
I know what I want to do now, great video!
@Woodburner100
@Woodburner100 Ай бұрын
Consider cast iron like its glass. It’s absolutely not flexible and vibration will break it. But it’s extremely stable. You can braze it and it’ll be ok again but that’s a learning process as well. Well worth it in my opinion though.
@HHH-nv9xb
@HHH-nv9xb 7 күн бұрын
Sell the extra blade, cap & thumb screw, you will probably be able to recover most if not all of the cost of the tool purchase.
@markpope6162
@markpope6162 6 ай бұрын
Excellent video Erik. I love how you keep going when you get your wucking mords fuddled. 🙂
@rvburbank1
@rvburbank1 6 ай бұрын
You should look at a no 52 spokeshave. Has the same handles with the center section of a 51. Great vid btw
@gregorymacneil2836
@gregorymacneil2836 6 ай бұрын
On the up side you have a spare blade and thumb screw!
@LeeWeiler
@LeeWeiler 6 ай бұрын
Another great one, Erik. Thanks for the insights on getting into the spokeshave game. Speaking of spokeshaves … have you ever made an old-timey wagon wheel with wooden spokes? (A wooden-wheeled penny farthing bicycle?). That would be a dope video!
@insertcointryagain
@insertcointryagain 6 ай бұрын
Hey Curtis, if you have all the parts of your broken handle or at least most, it can be used as a pattern to make a new one. Any backyard sand caster can make a new one for you. You can even change the metal if you want a different weight. Threaded holes will need to be tapped. The surface around the blade will need to be flattened and square. A machine shop would know what to do there.
@billlichirie14
@billlichirie14 6 ай бұрын
I believe you can Silver solder it together and it will be much stronger than brazing if I properly recall a repair article from sometime in the last 50 years
@michaelholbrook4401
@michaelholbrook4401 6 ай бұрын
My mouth is so used to saying the wrong thing at times, that I didn't even noticed you said the wrong name and thought in my head you said sole, until you mentioned it. :)
@dpasek1
@dpasek1 6 ай бұрын
Repair the old casting by using a TIG torch to melt silicon bronze filler into the fractures. You just need to bevel the edges of the breaks a little bit and you will need to set up fixturing to hold the pieces while they are joined. The color of the bronze will be visible, but you can just repaint.
@walterrider9600
@walterrider9600 6 ай бұрын
thank you EN . i was a machinist on a ww2 sub tender back in 72 . a little back ground if you will. all metal gets brittle in time. old machists trick is to machine over sized and toss it in a manure pile for a yr lets the carbons jell if you will . it is not a practice used in manufacturing . words are hard too . good luck .
@michaelholbrook4401
@michaelholbrook4401 6 ай бұрын
Have you thought about getting in contact with a smith and using the old one as a pattern to make a mold and casting a new one, in that exact style, out of newer metal?
@Flintlock1972
@Flintlock1972 6 ай бұрын
I have been restoring Stanley planes and a Stanely #82 scraper over the last few months. I tried CRC Evaporust and that is amazing stuff. Environmentally friendly and reusable. Just let the parts sit in the solution and the rust is gone. It does not affect the Japaning, referred to as paint in this video. It removes the Iron Oxide, rust, without removing any metal. If I ever smacked open my father's tools on a work bench I would never been able to touch another tool of his. You learned a valuable lesson about cast metal, luckily you were able to find another to replace it.
@JorgTheElder
@JorgTheElder 6 ай бұрын
Do yourself a favor and get some Evapo-rust. Degreasing, then some time in Evapo-rust, then light oil. It will save you time and get rid of the rust in the nooks and crannies making your restoration last. Your use of "undulations" was spot on. Each tap causes a bit of flex and flex means fatigue and fatigue acts over time.
@einsteinbpc
@einsteinbpc 6 ай бұрын
Another great one. Coffee I. Hand darkness outside and a 30 minute video to enjoy. Cheers.
@transmundanium
@transmundanium 6 ай бұрын
Those #64 shaves are my favourite. I have not broken one; that would be awful! I have also stopped counting them. No, stop looking at that spokeshave rack!
@robertberger8642
@robertberger8642 6 ай бұрын
Cool
@LamboGallardo560
@LamboGallardo560 6 ай бұрын
As a former engineer I'm all too familiar with the choices made in design that affect the life of a thing. And all things do have a life, from material fatigue at the very least. Get into moving parts and now you've got wear bringing the life down further and introducing planned obsolescence along with it as companies will only design a thing to resist wear for so long. When I buy things, the more complex it is the more I'm willing to spend. When it's a solid piece of metal is when I spend the least, because at the end of the day it can just be welded back together. You could definitely get this fixed. I'm actually looking at getting into 3D printing so I can make replacement plastic parts for things. So many modern goods are garbage if a single fingernail sized plastic piece breaks.
@darrellchitwood9167
@darrellchitwood9167 6 ай бұрын
I have a Stanley 51 and a 151. A Kunz 151 copy. I much prefer the 51 which looks quite similar.
@gerarddelmonte8776
@gerarddelmonte8776 6 ай бұрын
So if you want to try a flyer, some JB Weld with some steel reinforcing splines might save the original spokeshave.
@joeleonetti8976
@joeleonetti8976 6 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing. If you’re looking for content. I am sure you could find a local foundry to make your own bronze version of this tool. I’ve always that would make for fun project.
@johnnewell5025
@johnnewell5025 6 ай бұрын
A few friendly possibilities. W/R/T corrosion on iron or steel, if there is more than mere discoloration, you can often reduce or almost eliminate surface corrosion by working (sort of scraping) the area with the edge of a piece of copper and some oil (3-in-1 works!). No guarantees but often worth the effort. I have a few pieces of 1/8” sheet copper that have edges that work well for this purpose. Old pennies (not the post 1982(?) zinc pennies) work but not as well - relatively pure copper is better. The copper tone left by the scraping can be removed easily with 4-0 steel wool. For really fine surface clean-up, you can buy bronze wool that is obviously softer than any iron or steel product, and softer than many finishes other than paint. I totally take your point about the surface of the bench, but if people are concerned about this it’s very easy and cheap to keep a 2x4 piece of 1/4” MDF or equivalent around to lay down on top. It’s flat, cheap, easy to store and easy to “install” and remove.
@ericofadel
@ericofadel 6 ай бұрын
"NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO" I knew it was glued together, but seeing a spokeshave splatter is hard.
@stever2583
@stever2583 6 ай бұрын
Cast metal blues... One question... only one? Who has one spokeshave? Then the follow up question... Why would you hit your cast iron steel spokeshave against your workbench? Do you hate your spokeshave? Maybe get an assortment of them - one for each task? That way - when you punish them you are really just spreading the love around? Just a thought. I'mma going back to fine tuning my new C&C with my new sledge hammer!
@brenteanderson7948
@brenteanderson7948 6 ай бұрын
Best way sharpen spokesman blade
@spycedezynuk
@spycedezynuk 6 ай бұрын
Really nice informative video New t shirt idea “Lubritive woodworkers use 3in1” 😂
@kotqrka
@kotqrka 2 күн бұрын
You might try to contact guy (youtuber) Hand Tools Rescue and he might be able to fix your old one.
@brianhawes3115
@brianhawes3115 6 ай бұрын
Hey Eric, check out that woodworking magazine you were featured in,there’s a segment on making your own spoke shave, and it would be a fun show for you th to film
@mikeking7470
@mikeking7470 6 ай бұрын
Sorry that words are not your friends but thanks from all of us for leaving those flubs in! I suspect that any brand new, in the box, spokeshave will also take almost as much "fettling" as your new to you classic. If you're not made of money (not all of us a KZbin millionaires, LOL), look also to Taylor Toolworks and Kunz, I have examples of both that are "just" pretty good. You could use a small brass hammer to tap your spokeshave. Tapping it on the edge of the bench is much more stressful. And a granite tile is flat enough for woodworking.
@yossiyaari3760
@yossiyaari3760 6 ай бұрын
About the flat granite for sharpening: I picked up a piece of stone counter from a renovation. In my country poured granite is the standard for counter tops.
@mandowarrior123
@mandowarrior123 2 ай бұрын
You can't pour granite, it's igneous rock.
@yossiyaari3760
@yossiyaari3760 2 ай бұрын
@@mandowarrior123 Correct. It's poured fake granite. Not sure what it's called in the US.
@acrocha1222
@acrocha1222 6 ай бұрын
Cool I have an identical one and was wondering how to fix it up for use.
@MichaelCampbell01
@MichaelCampbell01 6 ай бұрын
3 in 1 oil... a man of culture, I see.
@quirkygreece
@quirkygreece 6 ай бұрын
When you’re struggling with your words, maybe try the 3 in 1 oil on your tongue . . . Happy new year Erik.
@jbarker2160
@jbarker2160 6 ай бұрын
You should include your hardware manufacturers in your video descriptions as well!
@cj-ef1rp
@cj-ef1rp 6 ай бұрын
Just drop the broken tool to a welder or decent body guy. They can braze it back together and then it will be good as new. And if you can’t find someone, send it to me, I’ll gladly do it. It’s a 30’ job start to finish (remove old paint, lightly groove the crack, braze it up, file the seam down for a flush finish). You can either repaint it or treat it with a coating to prevent corrosion.
@aaronblackford981
@aaronblackford981 6 ай бұрын
Kinda curious what you meant by 30’. In wood. That means 30 foot which doesn’t work for this. Or was this meant to mean minutes. Btw. Just started watching video as I was a little confused early. As I watched while reading for a few more seconds, I kinda believe your talking minutes? Please inform me either way. I feel like an idiot as I know how much welders make vs woodworkers
@ga5743
@ga5743 6 ай бұрын
Glad you got another favorite spokeshave, now for 3 in 1 oil…….yuck it stinks and I don’t like the smell but that’s just me. You certainly made me laugh with your cotton mouth this morning, get some rest. 😊
@roberthahn8555
@roberthahn8555 6 ай бұрын
30’ in this context means 30 minutes. Had he said 30” that would have been 30 seconds (which, yes, would be crazy fast)
@cj-ef1rp
@cj-ef1rp 6 ай бұрын
@@aaronblackford981 that’s a common engineering mark for minutes. Seconds would be “. Full angle measures would be 75*32’12” (degrees, minutes, seconds). Sorry to hash up a woodworking channel with engineering jargon 🤭
@williammaxwell1919
@williammaxwell1919 6 ай бұрын
​@@roberthahn8555 I wish the when we (NZ & AU) when metric in 1966, they'd dropped ' & " and gone with decimal degrees; so much easier to draw up from a title or survey plan than imperial mets and bounds (I was an architect)
@mcapo3040
@mcapo3040 6 ай бұрын
Restoring old tools can be quite lubracative
@HopeStreetWoodworks
@HopeStreetWoodworks 6 ай бұрын
Stanley used Japanning on their planes and spokeshaves until after world war 2. It's a mixture of Asphaltum, linseed oil and turpentine and then baked.
@raisinggrainwoodworking
@raisinggrainwoodworking 6 ай бұрын
I need that coffee mug. You have it so prominently displayed in the video how do you not have a link to it? OK, back the regularly scheduled programing, lol
@henrysboy2
@henrysboy2 6 ай бұрын
By the time u got to “spick and pan” I was cracking up.
@williammaxwell1919
@williammaxwell1919 6 ай бұрын
Your Effel Tower comment was interesting as the components were cast and the mating faces were purortedly machined to 0.25mm (0.00984") tollerances
@Jimmy-wk3of
@Jimmy-wk3of 6 ай бұрын
Love your videos! Keep the “decent content” coming!
@margaretskinner6972
@margaretskinner6972 6 ай бұрын
I wonder about the history of this item, who , where, when was it previously used ?
@user-os7jz1oc5y
@user-os7jz1oc5y 6 ай бұрын
My new, out of the box Veritas spokeshave won't even come close to taking a shaving cos the mouth is far too tight.Chris Schwarz recommends filing them open ,but it takes courage to start filing out a brand new tool.Why won't the damn things cut from new?
@user-ri9wb8ys1w
@user-ri9wb8ys1w 6 ай бұрын
i think it's cast iron, not steel so it doesn't like shocks ^^ I would go to a welding repair
@bhazen406
@bhazen406 4 ай бұрын
Just picked up a 63 the round bottom version and hunting down a 64 because I hate the 151
@casual257
@casual257 3 ай бұрын
Wow the restoration took less time then your talking!
@btheman779
@btheman779 6 ай бұрын
Know anyone who could braze the old cast iron pieces together for you? then paint it up again leaving the bronze exposed just for the story? Sure someone in the community has the skills.
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