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Cody Cantrell
03-16-2013, 1:59 PM
Yesterday while rust hunting I found a Disston D-8 thumb hole rip saw for $4. The tote was in great shape, the plate was straight and looked full width...but was covered in rust. I put it in an electrolosysis bath andbremoved all of the rust. This revealed light pitting on theventire surface, nothing heavy though. Since rip saws are filed with no fleam is pitting as big a concern as on a crosscut saw? Thanks for any comments.

Cody

David Weaver
03-16-2013, 2:03 PM
It will have little effect on how well a rip saw cuts. It's toxic on crosscut saws if the pitting is anything but the lightest, but to find a good straight D8 thumbhole for $4...you've done very well.

Cody Cantrell
03-16-2013, 4:40 PM
That was what I was thinking. It is from 1917-40 era and it is cleaning up nicely. I have resharpened it and wiped a few coats of danish oil on the tote then I will give it a test run.

Jessica Pierce-LaRose
03-16-2013, 7:10 PM
Dave - does the "toxic" only apply to crosscut saws when the pitting extends down to the teeth, or would you find it a concern in general? An issue only in saws where you're hoping for a finish cut, or rougher crosscuts as well? Your answer is important here - it might help me justify more tool purchases and rust hunting. ;)

peter gagliardi
03-16-2013, 10:24 PM
If your plate is straight, pitting has no effect unless at the cutting edge . I have a few old saws with light pitting, and actually think they saw better- less surface area to contact, as I like minimal set.

David Weaver
03-16-2013, 11:34 PM
Yeah, at the teeth and anywhere you plan for the teeth to be in the future. As peter said, if the pitting is up the plate near the spine or something and the saw is still straight, it's just cosmetic.

crosscut saws that have clean plates are still generally more reasonable than a big ripper, so I personally would stick to plates that are clean (dark's fine) on crosscut saws.

Charlie Stanford
03-17-2013, 4:34 PM
Yesterday while rust hunting I found a Disston D-8 thumb hole rip saw for $4. The tote was in great shape, the plate was straight and looked full width...but was covered in rust. I put it in an electrolosysis bath andbremoved all of the rust. This revealed light pitting on theventire surface, nothing heavy though. Since rip saws are filed with no fleam is pitting as big a concern as on a crosscut saw? Thanks for any comments.

Cody

Pitting is not good for any saw. Pitting at the tips/edges of any saw - rip or crosscut is not good. If you plan on getting into hand tool woodworking in a big way don't use pitted steel on any tool at any time. Ripping is the hardest work you'll do in a hand tool woodshop. Don't do it with pockmarked steel. The fact that the saw cost $4 has no bearing on anything. Use it to learn sharpening and restoration then unload it and get a saw with clean plate. You deserve a clean saw. When you are 40 or so inches into a rip cut on 8/4 Ash or Maple remember what Ole Charlie told you. The best saw money can buy won't feel sharp enough. You can trust me on this.