I have sharpened chisels with my strip sander using this. http://www.shopsmith.com/ownersite/cata ... ingatt.htm. Works great!tomsalwasser wrote:Thanks Chris! I'd enjoy hearing and seeing more about how you use the strip sander on your projects. Also, do you do any sharpening with it?nuhobby wrote:The Strip Sander was my most recent 'big' accessory from Shopsmith. Since I work on a lot of small boxes, tools, cabinetry, I really use it a lot. Actually have even daydreamed about getting a 2nd one, so I could have different platens or grits available at the same time. Haven't talked the Finance Ministry into that one, yet! Chris
Tom
New Years Resolution
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Re: New Years Resolution
Gale's Law: The bigger the woodworking project, the less the mistakes show in any photo taken far enough away to show the entire project!
- BuckeyeDennis
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- Location: Central Ohio
Re: New Years Resolution
The chisel sharpening package for the strip sander is on my list for this year. But first I have to restore the strip sander. Unless the Mothership runs a special on the sharpening package, that is. 
Re: New Years Resolution
Tom,
Actually I do preliminary sharpening "grinds" a lot on the Strip Sander. I've restored a lot of hand-planes and I'll use the stripsander at a low speed to square up and re-bevel old abused blades. Especially with the PowerPro, it can go slow enough to not have to worry about overheating the hardened/tempered blades. Amazing that some hand-tool guys will search far and wind for a low-speed grinding systems, and you get it almost for free with Shopsmith.... As of so far I do the preliminary work on the stripsander, then go to a handheld jig and finer sandpapers for the 'scary sharp' system. If I had a 2nd stripsander... well, the possibilities increase
. I don't have the special SS sharpening jig for the strip sander, but I've set up any number of simple shopmade jigs for the odd jobs I do. It's a fun tool for me.
Chris
Actually I do preliminary sharpening "grinds" a lot on the Strip Sander. I've restored a lot of hand-planes and I'll use the stripsander at a low speed to square up and re-bevel old abused blades. Especially with the PowerPro, it can go slow enough to not have to worry about overheating the hardened/tempered blades. Amazing that some hand-tool guys will search far and wind for a low-speed grinding systems, and you get it almost for free with Shopsmith.... As of so far I do the preliminary work on the stripsander, then go to a handheld jig and finer sandpapers for the 'scary sharp' system. If I had a 2nd stripsander... well, the possibilities increase
Chris