Daddles
25th January 2010, 07:15 PM
Back in my teenage years, I was given a chisel. That old girl has been with me ever since, copping all sorts of abuse in the early days as I learned how to butcher timber into useable configerations. In later years, she's served as my general purpose chisel in the boat shed - she scrapes epoxy off timber, she scrapes pencil lines off timber, she chips and chisels epoxy ooze (a job best done with an angle grinder) ... she even gets to do some woodwork but thanks to her other duties, she's never really up to fine joinery so those tasks are given to a set of chisels that never have to contend with the cast iron like qualities of set epoxy.
BUT ... and I stress this ... she doesn't get used for opening tins or shaping concrete or any of the other abuses some chisels suffer. Cripes, I even use a wooden mallet :oo:
Sadly though, she's sorely injured.
The brass ferule that holds the handle together has been slipping off regularly for some years now ... just slide it back on, no biggie, except I didn't notice this afternoon ... and the handle fell apart.
Nope, it's not a 'glue the handle back together job' because I've also managed to bugger up the lip where the ferule used to sit (yes, I was inattentive :doh:).
So now me old chisel ain't got no handle. :(
A replacement chisel has already been bought - a $15 rip snorter from Mitre 10, okay for chiselling epoxy but I know the steel won't be the same as the old girl.
Sooooooo ... (yes , there was a point to all this)
Is anyone interested in a wee project? I know some of you make handles for your tools and I'm sure there's a novice out there looking for opportunities to gain some more experience. I'm not after something fancy, just something to hold onto and to whack vigorously with the wooden mallet.
Thanks.
Richard
Yes, I went straight up to the pub and bought a long neck :-
PS. I'm in southern Adelaide
BUT ... and I stress this ... she doesn't get used for opening tins or shaping concrete or any of the other abuses some chisels suffer. Cripes, I even use a wooden mallet :oo:
Sadly though, she's sorely injured.
The brass ferule that holds the handle together has been slipping off regularly for some years now ... just slide it back on, no biggie, except I didn't notice this afternoon ... and the handle fell apart.
Nope, it's not a 'glue the handle back together job' because I've also managed to bugger up the lip where the ferule used to sit (yes, I was inattentive :doh:).
So now me old chisel ain't got no handle. :(
A replacement chisel has already been bought - a $15 rip snorter from Mitre 10, okay for chiselling epoxy but I know the steel won't be the same as the old girl.
Sooooooo ... (yes , there was a point to all this)
Is anyone interested in a wee project? I know some of you make handles for your tools and I'm sure there's a novice out there looking for opportunities to gain some more experience. I'm not after something fancy, just something to hold onto and to whack vigorously with the wooden mallet.
Thanks.
Richard
Yes, I went straight up to the pub and bought a long neck :-
PS. I'm in southern Adelaide