(06-26-2017, 08:12 AM)JimReed@Tallahassee Wrote: My go to chisels are the Grizzly set. I love those things. I have a few nicer Japanese chisel sets but they are just too pretty to use. I can pound on the Grizzly's guilt free.
I have new old stock, too: Veritas.
And I prefer beating up the typical Japanese bench chisel instead of one at four times the cost. However, I picked up one--my first--from Grizzly a few years back which immediately made me suspicious of any chisel called "Japanese chisel". Sorry Wilbur, but knockoffs are very prevalent, and very bad.
To the OP: .... Jeeze, man, you have been here since the stone age! Are you from upper New York? How was it here, back then, in 'o1?
Do not compare, or even try to compare the Narex with a Japanese-made laminated steel chisel. If you hear good things about a Japanese laminated steel tool, get that type, made in Japan. Not a common HC steel fashioned in a Japanese style, made in Czech. Republic.
The Noire style I have are, I believe, what came from Highland a few years back. I think mine were simply shuffled between owners with odds introduced to keep the 10-set status. I paid $20 each, and they are good. A solid "good". I prefer using them. But! ...
But, it takes a while to get each tool set up and fine tuned before use. If you don't, you will hate them. It's best to start with one or two Japanese chisels. Including setting hoops, I think it took a day on diamonds to get the bevel of a larger one flat, then honed. I probably lost a pint of blood in the process. I only hate them while sharpening and honing. They use a flat bevel but some people save blood and send them to a grinding wheel.
Know that mixing metric, almost-metric (Japanese), and Imperial tools can turn into multiple nightmares. I had a mess until I decided to use my Jap. tools for clearing out wood only; never establishing socket size with them.
Cheap tools are really dead weight. Jim likes his Grizzly lam. steel tools. Mine chips if you look at it, and the hard steel is so thin and short on the business end, I keep it for a lesson in what not to accept. Seriously, I needed a magnifying glass to see the hard steel.
Hobby workers have used the standard chisel shape for so long it is dumm to complain about it. But, we are all suckers for something new. The new triage shape is a gimmick, so call it a specialty toy, like all that makes-life-easier-stuff "Honey" gets from the TV stores.