Tarting up an old axe
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Tarting up an old axe
Spawn needs a chopper and this skip find will do nicely.
A bash with the bench grinder mounted wire wheel gets this:
Now I wait for a handle to be delivered.
A bash with the bench grinder mounted wire wheel gets this:
Now I wait for a handle to be delivered.
- Skub
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Re: Tarting up an old axe
I thought for a minute you were blinging up a 55 Telecaster. Now that's an old axe.
"Be kind to past versions of yourself that didn't know what you know now."
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Walt Whitman
https://soundcloud.com/skub1955
- DefTrap
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Re: Tarting up an old axe
Is that mark on it significant of anything interesting? Is it worth saving is what I suppose I am saying? (the junk fairs I go to are full of interesting old axes, mainly just useable heads tbh, and I always wonder if they are worth looking at or were retired for a rteason ...)
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Re: Tarting up an old axe
Even better would be a battleaxe. I miss 'Your mum' jokes.
Now it's clean and had the loupe on it I can see it's made by Whitehouse of Cannock.
A quick look on Ebay shows a lot of Whitehouse axes but none of the same shape. There's value in old tools but it's very variable, and I think marketing has a lot to do with it. Vehicle restorers seem to be the best at paying good money. Furrow depth spanners can sell for a good return on time.
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Re: Tarting up an old axe
I think I bought a few Whitehouse small cross pien (sp?) hammers for my wife a few years ago.
And I've put a new helve onto a hatchet I bought off Greengrass a while ago.
Had some ash but the grain was kind of diagonal and the wood was too thin so I laminated it.
Wasn't sure how long I wanted the helve (I often prefer long but light hammers to shorter heavier ones) so I left the helve very long so its a bit straighter than most hatchet helves.
Still needs a clean up with a spokeshave and wedge fitted but I'm a slacker so its waiting on my healing bench.
I'll fire a pic up later.
And I've put a new helve onto a hatchet I bought off Greengrass a while ago.
Had some ash but the grain was kind of diagonal and the wood was too thin so I laminated it.
Wasn't sure how long I wanted the helve (I often prefer long but light hammers to shorter heavier ones) so I left the helve very long so its a bit straighter than most hatchet helves.
Still needs a clean up with a spokeshave and wedge fitted but I'm a slacker so its waiting on my healing bench.
I'll fire a pic up later.
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Re: Tarting up an old axe
I need to get out more.
My brain read the OP as "texting an old ex"
Which, if you're not sure. You should absolutely never do!
My brain read the OP as "texting an old ex"
Which, if you're not sure. You should absolutely never do!
- ZRX61
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Re: Tarting up an old axe
I don't plan on doing anything so elaborate, at most the handle will get oiled and then it'll be in use.