Cheshirechappie
Established Member
A couple of weeks ago I bid on, and was lucky enough to win, an Ebay old saw. It's a 26" handsaw, 5 1/2 ppi (4 1/2 tpi) with a nice old-style handle, four split-nut screws, all of which are plain (no medallion) but one of which is larger than the others. All the screws are tight, and show no signs of having been tightened during their life.
One of the first things one does on receiving such a saw is look for the etch. Some tentative scraping of rust and dust revealed the imprint of the word 'Warranted'. Not an etch - a stamped imprint.
At this point, I paused and examined the saw more carefully. There was the usual rust and dust, of course, but the blade near the toothline on the split nut side was smooth to the fingers (rusty blades tend to feel rough), but dark-coloured. I therefore abandoned my original plan which was to dissemble and restore the saw, giving it a new set of rip teeth, and decided to just clean and conserve instead.
The handle (the screws of which were not disturbed) was treated with a mixture of linseed oil, turpentine, vinegar and methylated spirit. This was intended to loosen a couple of old paint stains, and remove dust, which it did; the paint was teased off with a scalpel blade. The blade was given a light rubbing with a mild abrasive (Brillo pad in this case) to remove surface rust, which it did. I abandoned previous thoughts about scrubbing with wet-and-dry, which I decided would damage any original finish should it still be there. It was. Over the whole blade. It also revealed the whole of the stamped imprint, which is not deep but is clear to read in a slanting light. It reads 'Thos. Ibbotson and Co Cast Steel Warranted Sheffield' The patina on the handle is dark (apart from a lighter patch on the 'stamp' side where it appears the sawyers index finger rested on the wood - could the saw have been used by a left-hander?), and had been left as cleaned. The blade has been protected with a coat of Renaissance Wax.
Stamping marks on sawblades was abandoned when the acid etch was introduced in the 1840s. (Stamping a thin piece of steel, even shallowly, is almost bound to distort it, giving the sawsmith a straightening operation that etching would eliminate from the manufacturing process.) According to British Planemakers 2nd edition, Thomas Ibbotson were in business from about 1825, so if BPM is about correct in it's dates, that nicely dates the saw to between 1825 and 1850, supported by the lack of a medallion, which were introduced somewhat later (I think).
The slightly surprising thing for me is the survival of the original blade finish (apart from a couple of rust pits). It's definitely a dark finish, but whether it's an oil-blacking or heat-blueing (which would happen naturally during tempering) is rather hard to judge.
Question chaps and chapesses - has anybody else come across an old saw with a blued or oil-blacked blade?
(PS - Genuinely very sorry I can't do pictures; still no digital camera - but it's a saw-shaped saw with an old curly handle. You've all seen them.)
Edit to add - something I forgot to mention. The saw is currently filed crosscut, and rather unevenly; given that 5 1/2 ppi crosscut is pretty vicious, I suspect it's a later modification; I suspect it may have been filed rip originally. Not much of the sawblade has been used; I'd say about 1/8" at most, judging from the sloped finished end to the heel end of the toothline, and the toe being a full 2 3/8" deep. It also has a rather shapely nib decoration to the top-end of the toe. When I think on to get the micrometer out, I'll measure the taper grind, but it's definitely there - very visible to the naked eye.
One of the first things one does on receiving such a saw is look for the etch. Some tentative scraping of rust and dust revealed the imprint of the word 'Warranted'. Not an etch - a stamped imprint.
At this point, I paused and examined the saw more carefully. There was the usual rust and dust, of course, but the blade near the toothline on the split nut side was smooth to the fingers (rusty blades tend to feel rough), but dark-coloured. I therefore abandoned my original plan which was to dissemble and restore the saw, giving it a new set of rip teeth, and decided to just clean and conserve instead.
The handle (the screws of which were not disturbed) was treated with a mixture of linseed oil, turpentine, vinegar and methylated spirit. This was intended to loosen a couple of old paint stains, and remove dust, which it did; the paint was teased off with a scalpel blade. The blade was given a light rubbing with a mild abrasive (Brillo pad in this case) to remove surface rust, which it did. I abandoned previous thoughts about scrubbing with wet-and-dry, which I decided would damage any original finish should it still be there. It was. Over the whole blade. It also revealed the whole of the stamped imprint, which is not deep but is clear to read in a slanting light. It reads 'Thos. Ibbotson and Co Cast Steel Warranted Sheffield' The patina on the handle is dark (apart from a lighter patch on the 'stamp' side where it appears the sawyers index finger rested on the wood - could the saw have been used by a left-hander?), and had been left as cleaned. The blade has been protected with a coat of Renaissance Wax.
Stamping marks on sawblades was abandoned when the acid etch was introduced in the 1840s. (Stamping a thin piece of steel, even shallowly, is almost bound to distort it, giving the sawsmith a straightening operation that etching would eliminate from the manufacturing process.) According to British Planemakers 2nd edition, Thomas Ibbotson were in business from about 1825, so if BPM is about correct in it's dates, that nicely dates the saw to between 1825 and 1850, supported by the lack of a medallion, which were introduced somewhat later (I think).
The slightly surprising thing for me is the survival of the original blade finish (apart from a couple of rust pits). It's definitely a dark finish, but whether it's an oil-blacking or heat-blueing (which would happen naturally during tempering) is rather hard to judge.
Question chaps and chapesses - has anybody else come across an old saw with a blued or oil-blacked blade?
(PS - Genuinely very sorry I can't do pictures; still no digital camera - but it's a saw-shaped saw with an old curly handle. You've all seen them.)
Edit to add - something I forgot to mention. The saw is currently filed crosscut, and rather unevenly; given that 5 1/2 ppi crosscut is pretty vicious, I suspect it's a later modification; I suspect it may have been filed rip originally. Not much of the sawblade has been used; I'd say about 1/8" at most, judging from the sloped finished end to the heel end of the toothline, and the toe being a full 2 3/8" deep. It also has a rather shapely nib decoration to the top-end of the toe. When I think on to get the micrometer out, I'll measure the taper grind, but it's definitely there - very visible to the naked eye.