03-10-2012, 04:32 PM
Well this saw had been hanging around for a while waiting for me to get to it. I purchased 4 very nice saws from Ambidex last fall and was given one. The No.77 is the second saw from the top in the second picture.
It needed a new tooth line as 3 of the teeth had been broken off down to the bottom of the gullet and one was about half way gone. The cause..........someone had set the teeth. Not unusual on any of the no-set saws.
This required grinding all the old teeth off to start with and then jointing with a file to clean it up. The edge already had a good breast to it so I didn't have to establish that.
and starting to file new ones in using my gauges to start the gullet.
After I got the new teeth in I started bevel filing the first side. This was done at a pretty severe 45° but that's what Disston recommended in one of their 1907 books.
When all was said and done this is what I ended up with. With a 45° bevel you won't create a 60° included angle on the teeth. If it had been filed with a sloped gullet this could be achieved but would not create any bevel on the back of the tooth. Disston clearly said to file with saw held vertically and the file at 90° to the side of the plate. These no-sets will cut sweeter when there is a bevel on the front and back of each tooth.
It needed a new tooth line as 3 of the teeth had been broken off down to the bottom of the gullet and one was about half way gone. The cause..........someone had set the teeth. Not unusual on any of the no-set saws.
This required grinding all the old teeth off to start with and then jointing with a file to clean it up. The edge already had a good breast to it so I didn't have to establish that.
and starting to file new ones in using my gauges to start the gullet.
After I got the new teeth in I started bevel filing the first side. This was done at a pretty severe 45° but that's what Disston recommended in one of their 1907 books.
When all was said and done this is what I ended up with. With a 45° bevel you won't create a 60° included angle on the teeth. If it had been filed with a sloped gullet this could be achieved but would not create any bevel on the back of the tooth. Disston clearly said to file with saw held vertically and the file at 90° to the side of the plate. These no-sets will cut sweeter when there is a bevel on the front and back of each tooth.
Take care,
Daryl
Daryl