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View Full Version : Another Gramercy Bow Saw in Yew - Liogier handle rasp test drive -



Dave Beauchesne
06-08-2012, 11:07 PM
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Well, after Chris Griggs made a bow saw from the Gramercy kit out of Yew, I had the urge to do the same.

The Woodworkers Guild I belong to has an annual 2 x 4 contest in which the piece must be made out of a SOFTWOOD 2 x 4 ( x 8 feet long )
Personally, I am not a softwood fan, but Yew is an uncommon species that fits the bill, so I use it for the purposes of the contest.
I also like making my own tools, another plus. Yew has the right tenacity for a project such as this, so here goes -

The piece of Yew I yewsed ( that was for you Chris ) was particularily light colored - it is usually more orange. Finding stock that doesn't have pin knots in it that may comprimise the arms is another task. I burned up over half the 2 x 4 getting rid of inclusions, defects etc., but got sufficient stock to do the job. You can see on the handle photos the swirling nature of Yew - it is unique to be sure.

I turned the handles and toggle on my Delta Midi-lathe, and roughed the curves out with my 14'' Delta clone; the rest was done with a dovetail saw, japanese pull saw, egg beater, spoke shave, card scraper, a couple of my LN chisels, my sweet little LN 102, and the star of the show, my newly aquired Liogier LH handle rasp. Yew is stringy - everthing has to be real sharp - the rasp performed very well.

Using the rasp was an EXTREME treat; the curved surfaces near the handles were next to effortless - it was like the rasp knew what it was doing - certainly not the driver of said tool - it was very intuitive. That experience has got me thinking saw handles down the road - - - -

A very well done video ( can't recall the gentleman's name ) that is on the Gramercy site for the saw was informative, but, here is where I like the Neander thing - he went into great detail on putting the tapers on the toggle - made a jig, secured it, bandsaws the taper on one side, fiddles around to do the other side and then smooths them out - a long and drawn out process - I pulled the toggle off the lathe, grabbed the 102 after eyeing and drawing a couple lines on the toggle, a bunch of strokes later and not much more time than it took to type this, and it was done !!

One stupid thing I did was use 3M spray adhesive to attach the photocopied pattern to the wood - I have done this in the past a couple other times, but finished the project fairly quickly and it was no trouble getting the pattern off - Welllll, this time I let it sit for a couple months while waiting for the shipment from France - it was like some molecular bond from another dimension took hold - a sharp card scraper liberated the pattern and underlying glue with some effort - at least the finish took well.

The finish is grated bees wax dissolved in mineral spirits, the twine I used is waxed nylon ( I think ) that my retired telephone company buddy gave me - it is quite flat, and they used to use it to tie and bundle the hundreds of telephone wires together - strong as heck, I like waxed twines anyway, but you have to know how to tie the knots - a couple of bowlines did the trick.

Installed the brass rods in the handles with some epoxy, assembled it and let it sit under slight tension overnight - torqued it up the next day and it cuts like a hot knife thru butter!! In the end, it is one of those things I won't use all that much, but it will have its place - and it is always with pride that I look at something I made and am able to really use.

Feel free to add your two cents worth -

Thanks for looking.

Dave Beauchesne

Sean D Evans
06-08-2012, 11:25 PM
I don't know why but I don't see any pictures!

By the way we live close to each other. I'm new to the area. What is the name of the guild you built this for?

Chris Griggs
06-09-2012, 12:10 AM
Dave!!! I'm so excited that yew made a Yew bowsaw for yewself. But the pics still aren't working. I'll check back tomorrow. BTW, for patterns nothing beat a child's gluestick. Fortunately my fiancee is an elementary school teacher so I always have access to one.

Looking forward to seeing the pics!

Edit:Okay they are visible in the other post!

Dave Beauchesne
06-09-2012, 12:12 AM
Chris - I reposted and it looks like photos have appeared !

Maybe a moderator can get rid of the one that the pics aren't showing up ??

Dave B

george wilson
06-09-2012, 9:45 PM
I only get an "invalid" sign,no pictures.