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blade cleaning before sharpening
Posted: Thu Jan 05, 2012 11:01 pm
by swampgator
Many times, the blade seems dull until it is cleaned of the tar and gunk. I spend $1 for a big jug of ammonia, soak the blades overnight, remove them and brush any remainder with a brass brush. Then I wax them just like waxing the Shopsmith. If they are truly sharp, they work pretty much like new. If the blade is truly dull on my first time after the clean, they go to the sharpening shed.
Posted: Thu Jan 05, 2012 11:42 pm
by JPG
Ron309753 wrote:$35?!? That's outrageous. I think my local sharpening shop charged me $6 IIRC. I would tell them no, and would tell them why, and would look elsewhere!
Sincerely,
Ron309753
I would look closely at how a 50 tooth carbide blade was sharpened for $6. I do not think 12 cents/tooth is realistic if done correctly.
Posted: Fri Jan 06, 2012 5:14 am
by dusty
Ron309753 wrote:$35?!? That's outrageous. I think my local sharpening shop charged me $6 IIRC. I would tell them no, and would tell them why, and would look elsewhere!
Sincerely,
Ron309753
I don't think that the price is outrageous at all unless you are using $10 saw blades from the thrift shop.
When I need a blade resharpened, I pay about that price and what I get back performs like a new blade. I send my blades
here for service. They are capable of doing more than just filing the carbide. They won't work on a blade that can not be done right
Posted: Fri Jan 06, 2012 5:42 am
by rlkeeney
dusty wrote:When I need a blade resharpened, I pay about that price and what I get back performs like a new blade. I send my blades
here for service. They are capable of doing more than just filing the carbide. They won't work on a blade that can not be done right
Is this just for Forrest blades? I looked on the all over the page and didn't see anything that said it was.
Posted: Fri Jan 06, 2012 6:36 am
by dusty
rlkeeney wrote:Is this just for Forrest blades? I looked on the all over the page and didn't see anything that said it was.
No, it is not just for Forrest products. I have had my Shopsmith blades done there three time.
What I do not know is if they changing their grinding specifications according to the manufacturer. I have never felt a need to ask.
I also do not know if they sharpen blades other than those tipped with carbide. I suspect that there is very little demand for sharpening steel blades but that is just an opinion.
Posted: Fri Jan 06, 2012 6:37 am
by pennview
No, Forrest will sharpen all blades. I've had Freud blades sharpened there in addition to Forrest blades.
Posted: Fri Jan 06, 2012 11:02 am
by aloibl
"Dusty" thanks for the link on the Forrest sharpening services. I noticed that they replace broken tips also. That is good to know! I dropped an older saw blade a few months ago and broke a tip off and just threw it away. I don't plan on doing that with my new Shopsmith blades but if I did I definitely wouldn't throw them away. I would send them up and get it fixed.
Posted: Fri Jan 06, 2012 12:16 pm
by dusty
aloibl wrote:"Dusty" thanks for the link on the Forrest sharpening services. I noticed that they replace broken tips also. That is good to know! I dropped an older saw blade a few months ago and broke a tip off and just threw it away. I don't plan on doing that with my new Shopsmith blades but if I did I definitely wouldn't throw them away. I would send them up and get it fixed.
You can still do that. They will add new carbide.