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#1
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"Conan The Librarian" wrote in message
... Wolfgang wrote: "Conan The Librarian" wrote in message ... ...At the risk of going even further afield -- I wonder if this is another one of those cases of guys who are process-oriented vs. results oriented. My hobbies are very much focused on the process. For most of us, most of the time, it's a sort of hybrid. Very few of us will bother to grow our own trees for lumber or make our own carbon fiber sheeting.....or whatever the hell it's called. Nor will many of us buy a vintage Record plane or a Winston rod and then pay someone to use it for us. ![]() Touche. :-) There's an ongoing disucssion on a woodworking group I sometimes follow that usually devolves into something along the lines of, "well if you're not flint-knapping your own tools ...". I still make my own glass knives for microtomy.......um, but the process is a bit more technologically sophisticated than "knapping". But I do think there's a real dichotomy there. Only if you ignore the bulk of the spectrum in concentrating on the infrared and ultraviolet cranks at either end. ![]() For example, if I'm not mistaken, Steve doesn't tie his own flies, preferring to buy them rather than take the time to tie them up himself. I love tying flies, and when I do buy them it's usually to get a "working model" to copy. I have yet to build a rod, but (like Claspy, that crazy bugger) when/if I do, I'll probably go the whole nine yards and try to build a bamboo rod. If either of you does decide to build a grass rod, I'd expect, given your predilections, that you would start by making your own planing forms. I enjoy the fact that I have a tangible byproduct of my hobbies, but I have so much fun partaking of the process that I imagine I'd still do it even without the tangible evidence. If I was more concerned about the end result, there are any number of places where I could speed up the process and even insure that my work is more uniform. But I've even been known to clamp a board to my bench and take a handplane to it for no other reason than to see the little wispy shavings come out of the plane. :-) Chuck Vance (I've heard rumors that Bill does the same thing, too) I used to do a lot of that......just to dull the plane irons.....so I could sharpen them again. ![]() I'm currently interested in making and flying kites, making cheese, and making paper. Would you believe it, in a city the size of Milwaukee I cannot find a decent retailer for materials for any of those activities! ![]() Wolfgang |
#2
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Wolfgang wrote:
"Conan The Librarian" wrote in message ... Touche. :-) There's an ongoing disucssion on a woodworking group I sometimes follow that usually devolves into something along the lines of, "well if you're not flint-knapping your own tools ...". I still make my own glass knives for microtomy.......um, but the process is a bit more technologically sophisticated than "knapping". I'd be interested in hearing more about how you do this. The closest I've ever come to that would be using a piece of broken glass as a wood scraper. :-) But I do think there's a real dichotomy there. Only if you ignore the bulk of the spectrum in concentrating on the infrared and ultraviolet cranks at either end. ![]() Well, we are on ROFF, aren't we? :-) For example, if I'm not mistaken, Steve doesn't tie his own flies, preferring to buy them rather than take the time to tie them up himself. I love tying flies, and when I do buy them it's usually to get a "working model" to copy. I have yet to build a rod, but (like Claspy, that crazy bugger) when/if I do, I'll probably go the whole nine yards and try to build a bamboo rod. If either of you does decide to build a grass rod, I'd expect, given your predilections, that you would start by making your own planing forms. Exactly. I've been doing some reading on that very thing, and since my metalworking skills are nil, I'd probably have to come up with a hardwood version. But I've even been known to clamp a board to my bench and take a handplane to it for no other reason than to see the little wispy shavings come out of the plane. :-) I used to do a lot of that......just to dull the plane irons.....so I could sharpen them again. ![]() Ack. Not me. I sharpen my tools on a setup that consists of multiple granite surface plates with wet/dry sandpaper of various grits affixed to them (also known as the "Scary Sharp" method of sharpening). Until I dedicated an area of my shop to that, I would go as long as I could between touchups (and I often paid the price for it). Now that I don't have to drag out my sharpening supplies, I tend to hone my plane irons on a regular basis, but I still don't like it. It interferes with the whole zen thing of making wispy shavings. (Speaking of zen, ask Claspy about his one-sided shavings.) I'm currently interested in making and flying kites, making cheese, and making paper. Would you believe it, in a city the size of Milwaukee I cannot find a decent retailer for materials for any of those activities! ![]() You have got to be kidding me. I don't know about kites and papermaking, but *cheese*?! In Wisconsin?!! Chuck Vance (the mind boggles) |
#3
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![]() "Conan The Librarian" wrote in message ... Wolfgang wrote: I still make my own glass knives for microtomy.......um, but the process is a bit more technologically sophisticated than "knapping". I'd be interested in hearing more about how you do this. The closest I've ever come to that would be using a piece of broken glass as a wood scraper. :-) Experience with broken windows, bottles, etc., suggests that glass breaks randomly. Not so. In fact, breakage is highly predictable....and controllable.....under certain conditions. Various machines have been built for a long time to control breakage in order to leave a sharp, straight edge on pieces of glass of the right shape and size for use in microtomes. The one pictured he http://www.canemco.com/catalog/histo...nifemakers.htm is fairly typical and looks much like the one I use. In the following description it will help to know what the raw material looks like: http://www.2spi.com/catalog/knives/histo.shtml A strip of glass is placed on the stage of the knife maker so that it extends left to right against the two flat pronglike stops at the base of the head mechanism. The left edge is aligned with a mark on the left stop (it helps if you save the picture and blow it up....but it's still not real clear). Turning the crank on the right side of the machine causes the head assembly to lower and press the glass down onto the stage via a couple of rubber pads and an square steel anvil (the front edge of which is visible as a bright white vertical stripe at the front end of the head mechanism) that hold it securely. The glass is actually raised above the stage proper by maybe a couple thousands of an inch by two parallel flat ridges visible as ribbon-like structures on either side of the slot running down the center of the stage. The slot contains a wheel type glass cutter that is activated by the large knob on the front of the machine. The knob is pulled out and then the button on top of it is held down, thus raising the wheel against the glass, and the knob is pushed back in, scoring the glass. Now, the crank on top is turned clockwise.....VERY.....slowly. This increases the pressure of the anvil which is pressing down directly above the scored line. Since the glass is suspended along two lines and the downward pressure is exerted evenly between them, the glass MUST break cleanly along the scored line......in theory. ![]() In fact, it takes a lot of practice to make a clean, straight break. The key to the whole process is stress relief.....and this is where the VERY slow pressure increase comes into play. Glass is actually a fluid. The verticle stained glass panes in the medieval cathedrals in Europe are measurably thicker at the bottom because the glass has flowed (ever so slowly) downward over the centuries. By increasing the pressure on the anvil very slowly, you give the stresses time to dissipate to some extent through the molecular structure of the glass. If you turn the crank slowly enough and pause frequently (we're talking something on the order of five minutes elapsed time here.....if done properly) you can actually watch the fracture line slowly creep up through the thickness of the glass. At this point you raise the head by turning the main crank on the side of the machine (the top crank is never reversed.....it is used only the increase the pressure) and you have the remainder of the strip on the right and one perfect square of glass on the left.....if you used the correct alignment mark. There are several marks, for different widths of strips. Reinsert the square under the head with one of the corners pointed toward the back of the machine until it stops against a pair of metal tabs (unfortunately pretty much invisible in the photo). The small dark structure at the front end of the slot on the top surface of the stage is a slide which, when pushed forward, rises, exposing another pair of prongs that capture the opposite corner of the square. Imagine a diagonal line running through two opposite corners of the square. Now, turn the line on its center by a couple of degrees. The glass square is held in a position such that when it is held down as before and scored, the score line is canted off the corners by those couple of degrees. Thus, when the square is broken in half you are left with two roughly triangular pieces. In fact, they aren't quite triangular....there is a small step at one corner. One of the angles formed in the last break is slightly more than 45 degrees and the other is slightly less. The angle opposite the one with the step in it is the new business end of the knife. The edge here was created from a theoretically perfectly straight piece of glass and will be (also theoretically) straight and perfectly horizontal when the knife is stood up on its flat edge. Once again, practice doesn't quite match theory. For one thing, the molecular structure of glass causes what is known as a conchoidal fracture pattern....it just doesn't want to break in straight lines. Additionally, perfection isn't necessary for most operations. The operator, knowing this, doesn't increase the pressure on the anvil as slowly as he might and, rather than watching the break line creep slowly through the glass he allows his bored gaze to wander and listens for a distinctly audible pop. ![]() If everything is done just right, the result is two perfect glass knives. What actually happens most of the time is that I increase the pressure on the anvil relatively quickly, make a dozen or so knives, discard ten of them, and end up with two that will do well enough in less time than it would take to make the two really good ones. This is really a more efficient use of resources because the glass is a lot cheaper than my time and the glass knives are only used for rough work....down to half a micron thickness....anyway. For ultrathin sections....60-100 nanometers.....we always use a diamond knife. But I do think there's a real dichotomy there. Only if you ignore the bulk of the spectrum in concentrating on the infrared and ultraviolet cranks at either end. ![]() Well, we are on ROFF, aren't we? :-) Yep, that's us, mostly monochromatic and largely invisible to most of the world. ...dull the plane irons.....so I could sharpen them again. ![]() Ack. Not me. I sharpen my tools on a setup that consists of multiple granite surface plates with wet/dry sandpaper of various grits affixed to them (also known as the "Scary Sharp" method of sharpening). Until I dedicated an area of my shop to that, I would go as long as I could between touchups (and I often paid the price for it). Now that I don't have to drag out my sharpening supplies, I tend to hone my plane irons on a regular basis, but I still don't like it. I used a couple of silicon carbide stones that I had made by a local manufacturer....400 and 600 grit, if memory serves. I tried various jigs and fixtures but never liked any of them. But I loved to work those blades on the stones.....actually very similar to using the planes. I always finished them with tripoli compound on a leather strop. Polishing the blades makes a HUGE difference! It interferes with the whole zen thing of making wispy shavings. (Speaking of zen, ask Claspy about his one-sided shavings.) Um.....yeah.....moebius later.....remind me. I'm currently interested in making and flying kites, making cheese, and making paper. Would you believe it, in a city the size of Milwaukee I cannot find a decent retailer for materials for any of those activities! ![]() You have got to be kidding me. I don't know about kites and papermaking, but *cheese*?! In Wisconsin?!! Chuck Vance (the mind boggles) Ainna?! ![]() Wolfgang |
#4
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On Fri, 21 Oct 2005 15:06:33 -0500, "Wolfgang"
wrote: "Conan The Librarian" wrote in message ... Wolfgang wrote: I still make my own glass knives for microtomy.......um, but the process is a bit more technologically sophisticated than "knapping". I'd be interested in hearing more about how you do this. The closest I've ever come to that would be using a piece of broken glass as a wood scraper. :-) And I thought my grandmother's glass pastry knife was a tech marvel... BTW, should you ever try knapping flint, it's awfully sharp. Gently and carefully picking up a small knapped piece can be right up there with carelessly putting your hand in the knife drawer. First people to discover it were probably amazed and at a, temporary I'm sure, loss for how to use the marvelous stuff. Cyli r.bc: vixen. Minnow goddess. Speaker to squirrels. Often taunted by trout. Almost entirely harmless. http://www.visi.com/~cyli email: lid (strip the .invalid to email) |
#5
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![]() "Cyli" wrote in message ... And I thought my grandmother's glass pastry knife was a tech marvel... BTW, should you ever try knapping flint, it's awfully sharp. Gently and carefully picking up a small knapped piece can be right up there with carelessly putting your hand in the knife drawer. First people to discover it were probably amazed and at a, temporary I'm sure, loss for how to use the marvelous stuff. Should you ever find yourself in the position of needing to cut someone's heart out, you can still get obsidian scalpels from some surgical supply houses. Wolfgang who assumes they have other legitimate uses as well. |
#6
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On Sat, 22 Oct 2005 08:12:13 -0500, "Wolfgang"
wrote: Should you ever find yourself in the position of needing to cut someone's heart out, you can still get obsidian scalpels from some surgical supply houses. Wolfgang who assumes they have other legitimate uses as well. Even after all these years of life, including marriage and years on the 'Net, I have yet to have an urge to cut anyone's heart out. Occasional urge to punch someone in the gut, yes, but heart out? Nah. Too much messy finicky work. Cyli r.bc: vixen. Minnow goddess. Speaker to squirrels. Often taunted by trout. Almost entirely harmless. http://www.visi.com/~cyli email: lid (strip the .invalid to email) |
#7
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Wolfgang wrote:
"Conan The Librarian" wrote in message ... I'd be interested in hearing more about how you do this. The closest I've ever come to that would be using a piece of broken glass as a wood scraper. :-) Experience with broken windows, bottles, etc., suggests that glass breaks randomly. Not so. In fact, breakage is highly predictable....and controllable.....under certain conditions. Various machines have been built for a long time to control breakage in order to leave a sharp, straight edge on pieces of glass of the right shape and size for use in microtomes. The one pictured he [snip of lots of interesting info] If everything is done just right, the result is two perfect glass knives. What actually happens most of the time is that I increase the pressure on the anvil relatively quickly, make a dozen or so knives, discard ten of them, and end up with two that will do well enough in less time than it would take to make the two really good ones. This is really a more efficient use of resources because the glass is a lot cheaper than my time and the glass knives are only used for rough work....down to half a micron thickness....anyway. For ultrathin sections....60-100 nanometers.....we always use a diamond knife. I never cease to be amazed by the knowledge there is in this nuthouse. Ack. Not me. I sharpen my tools on a setup that consists of multiple granite surface plates with wet/dry sandpaper of various grits affixed to them (also known as the "Scary Sharp" method of sharpening). Until I dedicated an area of my shop to that, I would go as long as I could between touchups (and I often paid the price for it). Now that I don't have to drag out my sharpening supplies, I tend to hone my plane irons on a regular basis, but I still don't like it. I used a couple of silicon carbide stones that I had made by a local manufacturer....400 and 600 grit, if memory serves. I tried various jigs and fixtures but never liked any of them. But I loved to work those blades on the stones.....actually very similar to using the planes. I always finished them with tripoli compound on a leather strop. Polishing the blades makes a HUGE difference! Yep. I used to use what we call "the big green crayon", which is chromium oxide. I'd smear some on a leather strop or a piece of softwood and use that for final honing/polishing. It also works nicely for carving tools, as you can use the tool to cut the profile in a piece of softwood and then smear the stuff into that profile and hone the gouge on that. These days I use 3M "microfinishing film" for final polishing. You can see it at: http://www.leevalley.com/wood/page.a...04&cat=1,43072 But be careful if you go to that website. I've seen people go in there and never come back. :-) As for your comment about sharpening fixtures -- that is a complaint of mine as well. There really isn't one that will do everything well. They are either hard to center the iron in or they are tippy, or they don't work with narrow chisels, or ... So I learned to freehand out of necessity. I still use a guide when establishing a bevel angle or fixing a damaged edge, but for the most part it's quicker and easier to just do it freestyle. BTW, Lee Valley has come up with a sharpening guide that addresses lots of the problems associated with them: http://www.leevalley.com/wood/page.a...68&cat=51&ap=6 It interferes with the whole zen thing of making wispy shavings. (Speaking of zen, ask Claspy about his one-sided shavings.) Um.....yeah.....moebius later.....remind me. Very nice. :-) Chuck Vance |
#8
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"Wolfgang" wrote in
: Should you ever find yourself in the position of needing to cut someone's heart out, you can still get obsidian scalpels from some surgical supply houses. Some friends of mine took a course in aboriginal living, and made their own obsidian tools, which they used for survival over the summer. The instructor in knapping was one of the guys who supply the obsidian scalpels. -- Scott |
#9
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![]() "Conan The Librarian" wrote in message ... Wolfgang wrote: ...If everything is done just right, the result is two perfect glass knives.... I never cease to be amazed by the knowledge there is in this nuthouse. It took longer to write that description than it does to read the manual (well, the important bits, anyway) and make a knife. ![]() Making GOOD ones does take a bit of practice, though. ... Polishing the blades makes a HUGE difference! Yep. I used to use what we call "the big green crayon", which is chromium oxide. I'd smear some on a leather strop or a piece of softwood and use that for final honing/polishing. It also works nicely for carving tools, as you can use the tool to cut the profile in a piece of softwood and then smear the stuff into that profile and hone the gouge on that. These days I use 3M "microfinishing film" for final polishing. You can see it at: http://www.leevalley.com/wood/page.a...04&cat=1,43072 Back when I did more wood butchery in a shop than in someone's back yard, I had two sets of chisels. One set, all steel Mayhews, I let no one else touch. If someone needed a chisel I let 'em use the cheap crap. These days, alas, I've gotten lax. Now I won't let anyone look at the Mayhews. But be careful if you go to that website. I've seen people go in there and never come back. :-) After successful completion of a twelve step program, I'm no longer even tempted......well, for now, anyway. I got another monkey on my back these days.......goddamn the pressman! ![]() As for your comment about sharpening fixtures -- that is a complaint of mine as well. There really isn't one that will do everything well. They are either hard to center the iron in or they are tippy, or they don't work with narrow chisels, or ... So I learned to freehand out of necessity. I still use a guide when establishing a bevel angle or fixing a damaged edge, but for the most part it's quicker and easier to just do it freestyle. BTW, Lee Valley has come up with a sharpening guide that addresses lots of the problems associated with them: http://www.leevalley.com/wood/page.a...68&cat=51&ap=6 Too many parts. Icky. Assuming it works.....and I'm willing to take that on faith.....I still wouldn't be interested. As you know, there's a certain sublime satisfaction to be had in doing some things well the old fashioned way. Wolfgang |
#10
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![]() "Scott Seidman" wrote in message . 1.4... "Wolfgang" wrote in : Should you ever find yourself in the position of needing to cut someone's heart out, you can still get obsidian scalpels from some surgical supply houses. Some friends of mine took a course in aboriginal living, and made their own obsidian tools, which they used for survival over the summer. The instructor in knapping was one of the guys who supply the obsidian scalpels. Presumably, he scaled up a bit for this work........it's gotta be tough to feed a troop of hungry troglodytes on gerbil and vole tenderloins. ![]() Wolfgang |
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