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Phil Mueller
06-14-2018, 9:21 PM
This is from my local Craigslist. The saw on the right appears to have suffered some sort of sharpening agony. Poor thing.

387767

John C Cox
06-14-2018, 9:33 PM
Likely somebody did that for cutting green wood....

lowell holmes
06-14-2018, 10:18 PM
I would file the teeth off, remove the grunge, re-tooth, and sharpen and gloat. I have saws that I have done
that to and they are a pleasure to use. A curly maple handle would be gorgeous.

Kees Heiden
06-15-2018, 1:27 AM
3 tpi would make a sick ripping machine! But these teeth certainly need a lot of attention. The toothline looks like the walk of a drunk sailor.

James Waldron
06-15-2018, 1:46 PM
[snip] ... looks like the walk of a drunk sailor.

Hold on there now! I resemble that remark.

Just remember, you can't be drunk on the beach all day if you don't drink in the morning.
Beer: it's not just for breakfast anymore!
A bowman works on the pointy end of the boat (or down below with the owner's daughter). Owners and boat drivers stay on the pointless end.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dibTXeb25E0

That should just about set things right! You need to be more careful in future.

steven c newman
06-15-2018, 2:09 PM
Bring on the Sloop John B.

Short version of one of these?
387801
387802
Hmmm...

James Pallas
06-15-2018, 2:21 PM
Hold on there now! I resemble that remark.

Just remember, you can't be drunk on the beach all day if you don't drink in the morning.
Beer: it's not just for breakfast anymore!
A bowman works on the pointy end of the boat (or down below with the owner's daughter). Owners and boat drivers stay on the pointless end.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dibTXeb25E0

That should just about set things right! You need to be more careful in future.
Off with thee to Monroe Bay and the rest of you Virginia river pirates:D
Jim

Kees Heiden
06-15-2018, 4:12 PM
Where did you find that one? Just when I thought I had forgotten about my childhood...

Pat Barry
06-15-2018, 5:11 PM
How does it cut? I mean, you bought it, right?

Stew Denton
06-15-2018, 9:44 PM
Kees,

Looking at the tooth line and sharpening, your comments could be considered as insulting to drunken sailers. (Just kidding)

Regards,

Stew

Phil Mueller
06-15-2018, 9:53 PM
Well, no, Pat. Tempting, yes. It’s kind of like seeing your young child after he decided to roll around in a pile of mud; a complete mess, wish it didn’t happen, but also makes you smile. Saw till is full, a few needing attention. Just no time for another mess.

And for the rest of you:
That's exactly what I thought when first told of the tale. Buried in the island of the dead that which cannot be found except by those who already knows where it is. Find it, we did. And there be the chest... and inside, be the gold. We took them all! Spent 'em, traded 'em and fritted 'em away, for drink and food and pleasurable company.
Aye.

matteo furbacchione
06-16-2018, 6:56 PM
Maybe a saw meant for stone cutting. I wouldn't have believed it myself until I saw an ol time stone mason, when working in the UK, using what was essentially a wood rip saw with a similar tpi for cutting sandstone. I was quizzing him on it and he said the steel held up well with the large teeth. The teeth tips would reach a level of roundness very quickly and then stayed that way for lots of cuts. Didn't take him much effort or time to cut through some fairly large blocks of sandstone. He was saying before the days of carbide and you needed to cut stone onsite, that's what they did.

Added
Had a closer look at the picture and am pretty sure that's what it was for. If you look at the teeth and the way they're ground/filed it wouldn't work well with wood.

Warren Mickley
06-16-2018, 7:02 PM
Peter Nicholson, writing in 1812, said a ripping saw had eight teeth in three inches. This kind of saw cuts fast, but requires a lot of experience.

James Pallas
06-16-2018, 7:56 PM
Peter Nicholson, writing in 1812, said a ripping saw had eight teeth in three inches. This kind of saw cuts fast, but requires a lot of experience.
Once you get the hang of going in like a dive bomber they work good. Saws with big teeth like that filed crosscut wil go thru a 2x4 in 3 or4 strokes. Can't say much for the cleanest of cut, they will cut straight once you get the feel for it. When you have a couple hundred studs to cut, no 92 5/8 pre-cuts and no electrons available they are just great.
Jim

Roger Nair
06-16-2018, 10:21 PM
Just based on the photo, I would class the saw as a docking saw with a peg tooth filing, made for sawing thick material that cut on both push and pull stroke. Tooth profile is for cross cut and would not likely be effective as a rip saw.

James Waldron
06-17-2018, 10:56 PM
For the record, and before I get into the rum, I'll note that my primary rip hand saw is a 4-1/2 ppi model from the Pax line by Thomas Flinn. It goes pretty fast in soft wood, slower as the wood gets harder, exhausting on hard maple and upon occasion I've managed to resaw some Ipe; not much fun, but it did work -- eventually. My band saw can't resaw Ipe and breaks blades every time I try, even with carbide toothed blades. I wouldn't want to mess about with a 3 ppi blade unless it's in one of the Roubo frame saws.

But what do I know. I'm just a bowman doing a bit of woodworking for beer money between races.