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Location: Sparkling Clearwater, Fl. Tampa Bay Area
Often Tested. Always Faithful. Brothers Forever
Jack Edgar, Sgt. U.S. Marines, Korea, America's Forgotten War
Get off my lawn !
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Using a good saw is a very satisfying experience. And a good rip saw, sharpened well, is astonishingly fast. I didn't realize that for years - did my ripping with crosscut saws. The first time I used a rip saw was a revelation.
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Location: New Jersey
Great depth of saw plate left on that one. It will serve you well.
Credo Elvem ipsum etiam vivere
Non impediti ratione cogitationis
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Location: Santa Maria, Ca
Well done. Good find and good restoration for use!!!
Mark Singleton
Bene vivendo est optimum vindictae
The Laws of Physics do not care about your Politics - Me
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Location: South Alabama
You don't often see super-nice wood like that on a saw handle. It really is gorgeous. Good save!
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
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Thanks so much, folks! This is about the best saw I've ever found in the wild and am so happy for the friends I've made on the forums to share it with. I was lucky to get Bob Summerfield, Rocky Mountain Saw Works, to re-tooth it for me. He's about the greatest guy in the world to know if you like saws!! I would never trust myself to cut new teeth in this vintage, quality saw.
I've used this saw everyday since I got the plate back from him last Monday and my whole outlook on ripping with a handsaw has completely changed. I REALLY enjoy using it. I have another very old Disston Thumb Hole rip saw that cuts well but it doesn't fit the hand like this one does... With this one, my hand & arm don't get tired nor feel the strain nearly as much as with the bigger Thumb Hole Disston. When you stop and ponder the early & mid 1800s in terms of building structures...the importance of hand saws becomes much clearer. Learning and applying the skills of making a saw that is easy to use and effective in accomplishing the tasks was a worthy endeavor and the Wheeler, Madden and Clemson company hit the mark with this saw. The cone nuts alerted me to it's value and after scraping the red paint off the handle...I was convinced it was a prize. The problem becomes....now that I know there are such gems out there...I will probably sacrifice treasured 'shop time' for swap meet strolling!
Don
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Bobs work is excellent. I have something like ten saws he’s done for me and I will continue to have him do all my saw work.
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09-27-2019, 12:14 PM
(This post was last modified: 09-27-2019, 12:19 PM by jstraw.)
Great find and great restoration. I got the saw hunting bug about 8 years ago. Lots of decent saws local at good prices. Problem was I was finding them faster than I could restore them. Finally decided I need to stop until I cleaned up the ones I already had.
Life got in the way and years later, your post has inspired me to pull some out and work on them. I found 4 buried in the shop that need a little to a lot of work.
They’re a Disston D-95 (plastic handle), D-8 rip with a broken handle, an unmarked rip saw with a metal plate and cone nuts, and a large Spear and Jackson rip saw with nice wood.
As much as a dislike cleaning surface rust, these should keep me busy for awhile.
Thanks for sharing your restoration and getting some of us motivated.
John