Sloped Gullets: The Finer Points of Sharpening

Click to enlarge

 I find it hard, even after many years, to carry on a conversation about "sloping gullets" with at least a little chuckle.   Not at how it refers to a certain method of sharpening a hand saw mind you - its more that every time I hear the phrase "sloping gullet", I can't help but think of some sort of deformed fish...

That, and when researching the origins of this icthyological pursuit, I ran across a reference to a photo of a WWII era front-line French infantry "installation" (actually a shack the infantrymen had set up as a bar) called "L'Auberge des Gosiers en Pente" - or "The Inn of the Sloping Gullets" - that is to say, always thirsty... (from "The French in love and war: popular culture in the era of the World Wars" By Charles Rearick)

When sharpening a saw, there are several angles you are concerned with. The terms associated with these angles which are most important to this conversation include rake, fleam, and of course - slope (as shown in the graphic above -you can click on any of the images to see a larger, clearer version).  I'll try not to go into too heavy technical detail on saw sharpening as that's another subject, and it's been well covered by others... as well as myself.

Gone Mobile

It seems everything has gone mobile these days, what with smart phones, iphones, and hand-held devices being all the rage.  Even I've been sucked in, though only peripherally - while my phone is not a "smart" phone per se, it can browse the web. 

So - far behind the other sites out there, I've gone and finally added mobile capabilities to the site, so now (while you are stranded in that airport or wherever) you can read your favorite Norse Woodsmith articles and blog feeds on your phone.  I realize most blogging sites have this capability already, but hey! I'm a bit of a luddite and slow to adapt.

I've included a small applet below that will give you a preview of what the site looks like on a phone. 

Leif

 

Math, Metrics, and Mayhem

Going through my "archives", and I ran across this early article I put together some time ago and never published.  It's still good info, so here it is in its unvarnished glory:

Here's a few small tips I use when working to keep my projects on the straight and narrow, and some meandering thoughts on inches, feet, millimeters, fractions thereof and of paranoid machinists who have invaded the souls of today's woodworker.  I can't say it will help you mark the correct side of the inch mark, but maybe it will help.

Finishing the Radio Cabinet

 Well, at long last - the final chapter of the Radio Cabinet saga.   I've put this project off for a few months, and there wasn't really all that much to do to finish it, and finally, it is.Click to enlarge

The avid reader will have noticed I started this project just under a year ago.  It's been one of those  projects that I would squeeze in time on where I could, then set aside while other jobs were tackled.

Most of the repairs have been finished in earlier episodes, save for one - the fragile appliqué at the bottom front was broken in a couple of spots and missing a small piece at one end.   I have to get these pieces whole again before I can proceed on to finishing the cabinet.   It's deceptively simple task to do - there is a lot of patience involved.

A New Look

I apologize for the lack of content lately.  I have had the intentions of creating several new posts, but the world it seems has conspired against me!  I was just sitting down to compose a new article when an email arrived saying my web hosting company was going out of business, and that I had less than a month to react.  There was a choice to be made on whether to continue the site or not to, and you see here the resulting decision, to keep it up.  It was actually quite a wrenching decision for me, as I find myself with much less time these days, but so enjoy keeping up the site and the people I have conversed with because of its creation.  In the end, that's what won me over to continue.

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