Very nice work
Thanks Garth.
Very impressive - beautiful.
Thanks John.
Really nice-particularly like the details on the back!
T.
If the thunder don't get you, the lightning will.
Thanks Tony. The shaping to the back of the grip was one of the characteristics that attracted me towards the Eadon Moses shape, but in saying that if you look closely at the original design I sent you, I did include a change there. The other attraction IMO was uncompromised strength through the neck of the handle.
Stewie;
Beautiful, as is all your saws.
Curiosity question; your plate steel seems to have a wavy color I haven't noticed in other high end modern saws. Is it a different steel, do they "polish it out?", just not showing up in their pictures?...
I like the look vs shiny steel.
Thanks Phil.
I apply a different technique to my saw plates.
Stewie;
Stewie, another beauty!
Not only is the design classic (IMHO), but the level of execution you achieve in the crispness of the details, in both the metal work and the tote, are super impressive!
thanks for posting
Thanks Mike.
Stewie;
Very nice Stewie. Makes me feel like finishing a saw as soon as I get a lot of other things done.
jtk
"A pessimist sees the difficulty in every opportunity; an optimist sees the opportunity in every difficulty."
- Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)
Another great one Stewie. Is there something historical about the saw nut placement? I'm sure you must have to take that into consideration as well as the handles grain direction. I'm not at all being critical it's just my inquisitive mind working to understand something I know nothing about other than the torque applied to the nuts would be different on a closed handle.
Jim
Hi James. When you mention the difference in torque found on a closed handle, are you referring to the use of a 3rd saw bolt assembly.
regards Stewie;