12-18-2018, 10:25 PM
You folks will appreciate this little hand tool saga.
So I have this hewing hatchet, which I use quite a lot when I'm cutting up logs to saw up into boards on the bandsaw. (Got to have a relatively flat face to sit on the bandsaw table, after all.)
It's a nice tool and takes a keen edge.
When I got it some years ago, it had a short handle, and it was mounted on the handle such that the bevel was on the wrong side for the work I was going to use it for.
Here it is next to the original handle--for comparison. I made the new handle you see above, and I used it for a few years. It was the right length, but the more I used it, the more I realized I had shaved it too thin. My hand cramped every time I used it for more than a few minutes.
This winter, I decided it was time to redo my old work and make a new, thicker handle for this hatchet.
I selected what I thought was a very nice piece of pecan--straight grained and bone dry.
I meticulously laid out the handle shape, planed the blank to thickness, and started shaping the contours with a spokeshave. I worked slowly and meticulously, trying to get everything shaped just right for my hand.
As I was shaping the part that goes into the head (there's probably a technical term for it--one of you can enlighten me), I thought the wood was shaving off a little too easily for pecan. Oh well, I thought, I may as well get the handle fitted since I've come this far.
I was nearly through driving the head home when this happened:
Yep, the handle broke right off!
I'm not sure what went wrong, but this piece of pecan turned out to be too brittle for this application. I don't know if it has anything to do with the fact that the growth rings are so close together, or perhaps it just stayed wet a little too long before drying out. In any event, I had to start over (on handle #3).
Back to the wood pile. I found a straight piece of pecan from a different tree.
I worked faster this time, since I already had a good idea of how I wanted the handle to feel in my hand. It still took me another hour or so before the handle was exactly as I wanted it.
I started to tap the handle into the new head when I realized that I was putting it on upside down!
I drove the head back off the handle in disgust.
Ah, well, I found a spot where I could shave it down a little more in order to make the head go on a little more easily.
So ONCE MORE I tapped the head on.
And this time, everything went together properly. Finally!
A little Danish oil to bring out the color and give a bit of protection from moisture, and this hatchet is ready for some cutting action.
So I have this hewing hatchet, which I use quite a lot when I'm cutting up logs to saw up into boards on the bandsaw. (Got to have a relatively flat face to sit on the bandsaw table, after all.)
It's a nice tool and takes a keen edge.
When I got it some years ago, it had a short handle, and it was mounted on the handle such that the bevel was on the wrong side for the work I was going to use it for.
Here it is next to the original handle--for comparison. I made the new handle you see above, and I used it for a few years. It was the right length, but the more I used it, the more I realized I had shaved it too thin. My hand cramped every time I used it for more than a few minutes.
This winter, I decided it was time to redo my old work and make a new, thicker handle for this hatchet.
I selected what I thought was a very nice piece of pecan--straight grained and bone dry.
I meticulously laid out the handle shape, planed the blank to thickness, and started shaping the contours with a spokeshave. I worked slowly and meticulously, trying to get everything shaped just right for my hand.
As I was shaping the part that goes into the head (there's probably a technical term for it--one of you can enlighten me), I thought the wood was shaving off a little too easily for pecan. Oh well, I thought, I may as well get the handle fitted since I've come this far.
I was nearly through driving the head home when this happened:
Yep, the handle broke right off!
I'm not sure what went wrong, but this piece of pecan turned out to be too brittle for this application. I don't know if it has anything to do with the fact that the growth rings are so close together, or perhaps it just stayed wet a little too long before drying out. In any event, I had to start over (on handle #3).
Back to the wood pile. I found a straight piece of pecan from a different tree.
I worked faster this time, since I already had a good idea of how I wanted the handle to feel in my hand. It still took me another hour or so before the handle was exactly as I wanted it.
I started to tap the handle into the new head when I realized that I was putting it on upside down!
I drove the head back off the handle in disgust.
Ah, well, I found a spot where I could shave it down a little more in order to make the head go on a little more easily.
So ONCE MORE I tapped the head on.
And this time, everything went together properly. Finally!
A little Danish oil to bring out the color and give a bit of protection from moisture, and this hatchet is ready for some cutting action.
Steve S.
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Tradition cannot be inherited, and if you want it you must obtain it by great labour.
- T. S. Eliot
Tutorials and Build-Alongs at The Literary Workshop
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Tradition cannot be inherited, and if you want it you must obtain it by great labour.
- T. S. Eliot
Tutorials and Build-Alongs at The Literary Workshop