01-13-2021, 03:34 PM
A couple of points of order. I don't doubt for one minute his method works and works well. I haven't tried his way on a scraper. I'd be interested in hearing from anyone who has and whether scraper performance is any better than other more common methods. I don't see anything in his method that is fundamentally any different than other more popular methods, except for him "clearing the swarf" from under the burr.
Maybe I'm just not understanding exactly what he's saying, but he claims running the burnisher across the side surface when he removes the initial burr is work hardening the point of the scraper blade. All he's doing is deforming the burr, so when he turns the new burr, the steel that is moved isn't necessarily the same steel he work hardened by flattening the burr to the side of the scraper. All burrs are work hardened by definition, since you are deforming the metal to create a burr. You really wouldn't want to excessively harden the steel prior to creating a burr anyway, because that would mean the burr would be very brittle. Since burrs on scrapers are ultra thin to begin with, brittle would mean a fragile edge. Maybe what's happening is the first burr is too deformed to be useful. So he removes that burr by flattening it along the side, then turns another burr from a portion of the scraper that is already work hardened. Again, you get a harder burr, but risk it being too brittle and thus less durable.
Not a huge deal, but he claims a saw blade is "high carbon tool steel." No it's not. It's usually spring steel. Tool steel is generally defined as a alloy that is used to cut or machine other metals. Tool steels are usually high carbon, but many other alloying elements are added to enhance durability and wear. Most spring steels do not make for good cutting tools. You want a saw steel (and a scraper) to be low enough hardness to be able to sharpen using a file and flexible enough to have some resistance to cracking or permanently deforming in service. After all, in a saw, you're sharpening with a file and setting teeth, which means you need a moderate to low hardness, flexible steel. Lie Nielsen says they use Swedish spring steel in their saws. Swedish spring steel can mean a lot of different things. Most plain carbon spring steels, however, are high carbon steels.
Maybe I'm just not understanding exactly what he's saying, but he claims running the burnisher across the side surface when he removes the initial burr is work hardening the point of the scraper blade. All he's doing is deforming the burr, so when he turns the new burr, the steel that is moved isn't necessarily the same steel he work hardened by flattening the burr to the side of the scraper. All burrs are work hardened by definition, since you are deforming the metal to create a burr. You really wouldn't want to excessively harden the steel prior to creating a burr anyway, because that would mean the burr would be very brittle. Since burrs on scrapers are ultra thin to begin with, brittle would mean a fragile edge. Maybe what's happening is the first burr is too deformed to be useful. So he removes that burr by flattening it along the side, then turns another burr from a portion of the scraper that is already work hardened. Again, you get a harder burr, but risk it being too brittle and thus less durable.
Not a huge deal, but he claims a saw blade is "high carbon tool steel." No it's not. It's usually spring steel. Tool steel is generally defined as a alloy that is used to cut or machine other metals. Tool steels are usually high carbon, but many other alloying elements are added to enhance durability and wear. Most spring steels do not make for good cutting tools. You want a saw steel (and a scraper) to be low enough hardness to be able to sharpen using a file and flexible enough to have some resistance to cracking or permanently deforming in service. After all, in a saw, you're sharpening with a file and setting teeth, which means you need a moderate to low hardness, flexible steel. Lie Nielsen says they use Swedish spring steel in their saws. Swedish spring steel can mean a lot of different things. Most plain carbon spring steels, however, are high carbon steels.
Still Learning,
Allan Hill
Allan Hill