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(08-26-2018, 11:01 PM)Hank Knight Wrote: I bought what I thought was a Swan 1/8" socket firmer chisel online. When it arrived I discovered it has a channel or a groove the length of the back that turns the cutting edge into a shallow gouge shape.
Hank,
I'd say that's pretty cool, I've never seen that either. I think that could come in handy, but is it difficult to sharpen? there's a competing edge where the top is flat but the bottom is curved...maybe you can just sharpen like a chisel and use a slip stone on the gouge portion?
Interesting tool.
Alan
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Maybe for Cope & Stick work?
Show me a picture, I'll build a project from that
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My wild guess is some sort of specialized pattern maker's tool; other than that, I've never seen one like that either. It has the side profile of a sash mortise chisel, maybe a special order or user modified for something like making fly rods??
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08-27-2018, 08:51 AM
(This post was last modified: 08-27-2018, 09:02 AM by AHill.)
Lockset mortising chisel.
Edited:
I'm retracting my original guess and revising it to a spindle turning gouge. I can't find a handle like that in any Swan catalog I could find online.
Still Learning,
Allan Hill
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08-27-2018, 09:24 AM
(This post was last modified: 08-27-2018, 03:57 PM by jlanciani.)
Its just an out cannel gouge. Being that it is socketed, primarily used by a carpenter or millwright. I have a full set of Greenlee's, but Swan, Witherby, Buck, etc. all made them back in the day.
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I have one of those in a Witherby and couldn't find anything to tell me what it was.
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