Hey, that brings up a question that has puzzled me. As a fairly novice
woodworker, when DO you need to get your blade sharpened? How do you
know?
On Jan 24, 11:39 am, "Swingman" <[email protected]> wrote:
> When both your WWII's come back from Forrest after sharpening and as good as
> new!
>
> (A good case could be made that procrastinators really need three.)
>
> --www.e-woodshop.net
> Last update: 1/06/07
On Jan 24, 12:22 pm, "Edwin Pawlowski" <[email protected]> wrote:
> <[email protected]> wrote in messagenews:[email protected]...> Hey, that brings up a question that has puzzled me. As a fairly novice
> > woodworker, when DO you need to get your blade sharpened? How do you
> > know? You'll know. When take a bit more effort pushing the wood, the cut is not
> as smooth as you remember it, you get a bit of splintering, or you just cut
> a couple of nails in half.
>
> I sent a few blades to Ridge Carbide Tool in New Jersey. Two came back as
> good as new, the third one better than new. Although none were made by
> Ridge, they sharpen any brand.
What did they charge you?
<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Hey, that brings up a question that has puzzled me. As a fairly novice
> woodworker, when DO you need to get your blade sharpened? How do you
> know?
>
>
You'll know. When take a bit more effort pushing the wood, the cut is not
as smooth as you remember it, you get a bit of splintering, or you just cut
a couple of nails in half.
I sent a few blades to Ridge Carbide Tool in New Jersey. Two came back as
good as new, the third one better than new. Although none were made by
Ridge, they sharpen any brand.
You could, of course, go to their website were they have a price list.
"Lou" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> >
> What did they charge you?
>