richarddownunder
Established Member
Hi
I've been hunting for the elusive Curly-handled backsaw (inspired by Jacob's comments) and found a couple of Spear and Jackson backsaws, one with a curly-ish handle. One is 16 inch 12 tpi and the other 12 inch 14 tpi. The reason I'm posting this (apart from a gloat, if it is in fact gloat-worthy) is I'm not entirely sure what you do with a 16 inch backsaw, apart from polish it. I think it may have been intended as a sashsaw for window making, but I'm only guessing, not knowing much about such things.
After cross-cut sharpening as best I can (I used a triangular needle file not a proper saw-sharpening file as the new Bacho one I have seemed too big and started to chip anyway) it cuts well, well, they both do. Infact the 12 inch saw, although not especially pretty, cuts very well (BTW, what brand of file do folk use for sharpening small teeth, I couldn't find a decent fine file locally).
Anyway, just interested in the original use of such a big saw, if it indeed had a specific use. It certainly has some heft.
A few pictures after the customary refurbishment ( a bit of 400 grit emery followed by Autosol, stripped and oiled handle etc ...
And no, I didn't cut the railway sleepers with it. Used a chainsaw for that!
Cheers
Richard
I've been hunting for the elusive Curly-handled backsaw (inspired by Jacob's comments) and found a couple of Spear and Jackson backsaws, one with a curly-ish handle. One is 16 inch 12 tpi and the other 12 inch 14 tpi. The reason I'm posting this (apart from a gloat, if it is in fact gloat-worthy) is I'm not entirely sure what you do with a 16 inch backsaw, apart from polish it. I think it may have been intended as a sashsaw for window making, but I'm only guessing, not knowing much about such things.
After cross-cut sharpening as best I can (I used a triangular needle file not a proper saw-sharpening file as the new Bacho one I have seemed too big and started to chip anyway) it cuts well, well, they both do. Infact the 12 inch saw, although not especially pretty, cuts very well (BTW, what brand of file do folk use for sharpening small teeth, I couldn't find a decent fine file locally).
Anyway, just interested in the original use of such a big saw, if it indeed had a specific use. It certainly has some heft.
A few pictures after the customary refurbishment ( a bit of 400 grit emery followed by Autosol, stripped and oiled handle etc ...
And no, I didn't cut the railway sleepers with it. Used a chainsaw for that!
Cheers
Richard