Saw Sharpening

A couple of weeks ago, I bought Set & File by Matt Cianci from The Lost Art Press. I waited about a year for the book to be published as sharpening has never been a strong suit of mine when it comes to saw restoration.

I’ve owned a Lie Nielsen dovetail saw for years and recently restored a Spears and Jackson dovetail saw. While I could sharpen the teeth fine, setting them properly was a pain as the anvil in my saw set was too big to do the job.

I read in Matt’s book where he dismantled his Stanley No 42X saw set and filed the anvil thinner in order to properly set the teeth on fine tooth saws.

Sure enough, I followed his advice and clamped the anvil in my vise, and carefully filed both sides of the anvil in order for it to look like the one in his book.

Putting the saw set back together, the anvil looked like it would now do the job.

After a few minutes of sharpening and setting the teeth, the saw sat in its kerf nice and tight. Plus, it cut like butter.

Now, I have two dovetail saws that are ready for use. It’s amazing how simple tricks can help your woodworking skills. Major props to Matt Cianci!

4 thoughts on “Saw Sharpening

  1. Michael Moloney's avatar Michael Moloney

    Also just bought that book. I struggled with the very same issue you mention and looking forward to modifying my saw set. Thanks for the real world review.

    Cheers

    Mike from NZ 😁

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Jim C's avatar Jim C

    I did this years ago under instructions from Paul Sellers. I generally try to make the point more blunt or you could say shorter taper so more of the tip is supported in the body. Did it to my Somax 250 which is my favorite bender. out of all the benders it seems to have the best visibility which helps with old eyes.

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