On Jan 31, 9:16 pm, "Jay Pique" <[email protected]> wrote:
> Are there any more reasonably priced alternatives to Auriou for hand-
> cut rasps?
Popular Woodworking magazine has a tool review of some other hand cut
rasps they compared to the Auriou and said they were just as good.
Mentioned the prices were lower. Not sure if significantly lower or
not. Current issue I saw on the stand last weekend. Forget the brand
since I have the Nicholson 49 and 50.
On Feb 1, 12:52 pm, [email protected] wrote:
> On Jan 31, 9:16 pm, "Jay Pique" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > Are there any more reasonably priced alternatives to Auriou for hand-
> > cut rasps?
>
> Popular Woodworking magazine has a tool review of some other hand cut
> rasps they compared to the Auriou and said they were just as good.
> Mentioned the prices were lower. Not sure if significantly lower or
> not. Current issue I saw on the stand last weekend. Forget the brand
> since I have the Nicholson 49 and 50.
Thanks - I'll check it out.
JP
On Feb 1, 7:51 pm, Rick <[email protected]> wrote:
> [email protected] wrote:
> > On Jan 31, 9:16 pm, "Jay Pique" <[email protected]> wrote:
> >> Are there any more reasonably priced alternatives to Auriou for hand-
> >> cut rasps?
>
> > Popular Woodworking magazine has a tool review of some other hand cut
> > rasps they compared to the Auriou and said they were just as good.
> > Mentioned the prices were lower. Not sure if significantly lower or
> > not. Current issue I saw on the stand last weekend. Forget the brand
> > since I have the Nicholson 49 and 50.
>
> Another line of quality rasps is Gramercy, sold by Tools for Working Wood.
> Here's a link:http://www.toolsforworkingwood.com/Merchant/merchant.mvc?Screen=PROD&...
>
> I have no connection to either Gramercy or "Tools . . ."
>
> Rick
>
>
>
> - Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
Gramercy is the other rasps Popular Woodworking has the review on.
On Feb 1, 6:53 pm, tommyboy <[email protected]> wrote:
> On 1 Feb 2007 16:23:56 -0800, "Jay Pique" <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
> >On Feb 1, 12:52 pm, [email protected] wrote:
> >> On Jan 31, 9:16 pm, "Jay Pique" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> >> > Are there any more reasonably priced alternatives to Auriou for hand-
> >> > cut rasps?
>
> >> Popular Woodworking magazine has a tool review of some other hand cut
> >> rasps they compared to the Auriou and said they were just as good.
> >> Mentioned the prices were lower. Not sure if significantly lower or
> >> not. Current issue I saw on the stand last weekend. Forget the brand
> >> since I have the Nicholson 49 and 50.
>
> >Thanks - I'll check it out.
> >JP
>
> How do the microplanes compare to the 49 and 50?
I attended a seminar given by Marc Adams and he used the Shinto rasps
sold by Japan Woodworking, and others, for shaping something. Said
the regular model was much better than the one with the extra handle
on it. He spoke highly of them. And if you've seen marc Adams' slide
show of the furniture he has created, you would know he has some skill
in woodworking.
http://www.japanwoodworker.com/product.asp?s=JapanWoodworker&pf_id=15.410.52&dept_id=12881
http://www.japanwoodworker.com/product.asp?s=JapanWoodworker&pf_id=15.410.51&dept_id=12881
[email protected] wrote:
> On Jan 31, 9:16 pm, "Jay Pique" <[email protected]> wrote:
>> Are there any more reasonably priced alternatives to Auriou for hand-
>> cut rasps?
>
> Popular Woodworking magazine has a tool review of some other hand cut
> rasps they compared to the Auriou and said they were just as good.
> Mentioned the prices were lower. Not sure if significantly lower or
> not. Current issue I saw on the stand last weekend. Forget the brand
> since I have the Nicholson 49 and 50.
Another line of quality rasps is Gramercy, sold by Tools for Working Wood.
Here's a link:
http://www.toolsforworkingwood.com/Merchant/merchant.mvc?Screen=PROD&Store_Code=toolshop&Product_Code=GT-CMRASP.XX&Category_Code=
I have no connection to either Gramercy or "Tools . . ."
Rick
>
I think the microplanes are great for grating cheese. On wood, forget it.
"tommyboy" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On 1 Feb 2007 16:23:56 -0800, "Jay Pique" <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
> >On Feb 1, 12:52 pm, [email protected] wrote:
> >> On Jan 31, 9:16 pm, "Jay Pique" <[email protected]> wrote:
> >>
> >> > Are there any more reasonably priced alternatives to Auriou for hand-
> >> > cut rasps?
> >>
> >> Popular Woodworking magazine has a tool review of some other hand cut
> >> rasps they compared to the Auriou and said they were just as good.
> >> Mentioned the prices were lower. Not sure if significantly lower or
> >> not. Current issue I saw on the stand last weekend. Forget the brand
> >> since I have the Nicholson 49 and 50.
> >
> >Thanks - I'll check it out.
> >JP
>
> How do the microplanes compare to the 49 and 50?
Nicholson makes a good one.
http://www.toolsforworkingwood.com/indextool.mvc?prodid=MS-NICKRP.XX
Available in many places, this is just the first one I came across. Got mine
at Rockler.
"Jay Pique" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Are there any more reasonably priced alternatives to Auriou for hand-
> cut rasps?
>
On 1 Feb 2007 16:23:56 -0800, "Jay Pique" <[email protected]>
wrote:
>On Feb 1, 12:52 pm, [email protected] wrote:
>> On Jan 31, 9:16 pm, "Jay Pique" <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> > Are there any more reasonably priced alternatives to Auriou for hand-
>> > cut rasps?
>>
>> Popular Woodworking magazine has a tool review of some other hand cut
>> rasps they compared to the Auriou and said they were just as good.
>> Mentioned the prices were lower. Not sure if significantly lower or
>> not. Current issue I saw on the stand last weekend. Forget the brand
>> since I have the Nicholson 49 and 50.
>
>Thanks - I'll check it out.
>JP
How do the microplanes compare to the 49 and 50?
On 31 Jan 2007 19:16:33 -0800, "Jay Pique" <[email protected]>
wrote:
>Are there any more reasonably priced alternatives to Auriou for hand-
>cut rasps?
$21.50 for a hand-cut (8") at Lee Valley
http://www.leevalley.com/wood/page.aspx?c=2&p=20133&cat=1,42524
$94.99 for a hand-cut (7 7/8) at Woodcraft
http://www.woodcraft.com/family.aspx?familyid=5501&refcode=06INGOOG&keyword=auriou_rasps
Is the Auriou really $60+ better?
Joe
On Fri, 02 Feb 2007 02:28:21 GMT, "CW" <[email protected]> wrote:
>I think the microplanes are great for grating cheese. On wood, forget it.
Not only are they fine cheese-graters, but they're also good for
cleaning up the edges of cut drywall if you have an errant chunk or
two poking out of the side after snapping it. But I agree, on wood
they're almost criminally useless.
<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On Feb 1, 6:53 pm, tommyboy <[email protected]> wrote:
>> On 1 Feb 2007 16:23:56 -0800, "Jay Pique" <[email protected]>
>> wrote:
>>
>> >On Feb 1, 12:52 pm, [email protected] wrote:
>> >> On Jan 31, 9:16 pm, "Jay Pique" <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> >> > Are there any more reasonably priced alternatives to Auriou for
>> >> > hand-
>> >> > cut rasps?
>>
>> >> Popular Woodworking magazine has a tool review of some other hand cut
>> >> rasps they compared to the Auriou and said they were just as good.
>> >> Mentioned the prices were lower. Not sure if significantly lower or
>> >> not. Current issue I saw on the stand last weekend. Forget the brand
>> >> since I have the Nicholson 49 and 50.
>>
>> >Thanks - I'll check it out.
>> >JP
>>
>> How do the microplanes compare to the 49 and 50?
>
> I attended a seminar given by Marc Adams and he used the Shinto rasps
> sold by Japan Woodworking, and others, for shaping something. Said
> the regular model was much better than the one with the extra handle
> on it. He spoke highly of them. And if you've seen marc Adams' slide
> show of the furniture he has created, you would know he has some skill
> in woodworking.
>
> http://www.japanwoodworker.com/product.asp?s=JapanWoodworker&pf_id=15.410.52&dept_id=12881
>
> http://www.japanwoodworker.com/product.asp?s=JapanWoodworker&pf_id=15.410.51&dept_id=12881
>
My father had one of the Shinto type saw rasps in his shop back in
Pennsylvania 35+ years ago. It was the regular kind with the straight
handle, and it was a great rasp. When he passed, my Mother left some of his
closer friends have a tool or two from his shop, and I inherited the rest.
I was somewhat saddened to see that the japanese rasp was gone, but I know
the man that picked it out, and he was a true and good friend of my father
who appreciated it. I couldn't find another one until I stumbled across a
Japan Woodworker Catalog about 10 years ago.
At the time they didn't have the straight handled one available, so I
settled for the planer rasp instead.
With the exception of the handle position it is virtually the same tool
that I remember using in my fathers workshop those many years ago. I agree
that the positioning of the extra handle is somewhat clumsy, at least to my
hand.
I would suggest the regular one if you are looking for a general purpose
rasp, and the planer rasp only if you have need of the offset handle
feature.
Lloyd
CW wrote:
> Nicholson makes a good one.
> http://www.toolsforworkingwood.com/indextool.mvc?prodid=MS-NICKRP.XX
> Available in many places, this is just the first one I came across. Got mine
> at Rockler.
I'll second that. I have a #49 & #50. Those are excellent values and
I'm very happy with mine.
However, I was able to try a genuine, hand cut Auriou once, and they
really are sweet tools if you can spring for one. They're nearly
effortless to use and control.