tpi width height bendheight Aset=0.2 Aset=0.25 Aset=0.3
4,5 5,64 3,26 1,95 2,93 3,66 4,39
5,0 5,08 2,93 1,76 3,25 4,07 4,87
5,5 4,62 2,66 1,60 3,58 4,47 5,36
6,0 4,23 2,44 1,47 3,90 4,87 5,84
7,0 3,63 2,09 1,26 4,55 5,68 6,81
8,0 3,18 1,83 1,10 5,20 6,49 7,77
9,0 2,82 1,63 0,98 5,84 7,29 8,73
10,0 2,54 1,47 0,88 6,49 8,09 9,68
11,0 2,31 1,33 0,80 7,13 8,89 10,63
12,0 2,12 1,22 0,73 7,77 9,68 11,57
13,0 1,95 1,13 0,68 8,41 10,47 12,50
14,0 1,81 1,05 0,63 9,05 11,26 13,43
15,0 1,69 0,98 0,59 9,68 12,04 14,35
16,0 1,59 0,92 0,55 10,31 12,81 15,27
Okay, so I made a table of all dimensions of several tooth sizes.
Sorry the layout of the table got lost between excel and this forum, so it is a bit hard to read
tpi => the tpi of the saw
Width => width of tooth in mm
Height => height of tooth in mm with rake = 0 and sharp gullets.
Bendheight => 0.6 * height, a good spot to start the bend
Aset=0.2mm => arctan((0.2/2)/bend height) this is the angle in degrees over which the tooth must be bent, with a 0.2mm set.
The same for set=0.25 and set=0.3. With set I mean the kerfwidth-sawplate tickness.
Some caveats
Gullets aren't sharp, they are rounded. So the tooth doesn't really start so deep. So maybe 0.6 of the height for the bending point is too deep.
I think you need to set the teeth somewhat further because steel always springs back a little.
you can't use these measurements directly on the anvil, because the top of the toothline doesn't reach all the way to the top of the anvil. So you should add that little bit to the heights.
As you can see it is all very small. I doubt you're able to accurately translate these numbers to the anvil with just handtools. Nonetheless, I just bought another Eclipse77, so I have something to play with.
BTW, that CK sawset looks very interesting. Is it also suitable for small teeth?