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Slide 003: Sharpening Technique and Tool Maintenance

Slide Visual

Sharpening Technique and Tool Maintenance

Slide Overview

This slide covers hands-on sharpening technique for each tool type, burr formation for scrapers, and ongoing tool maintenance practices.

Instruction Notes

Sharpening a Spindle/Bowl Gouge (Wolverine Jig Method)

  1. Set the jig: Insert the tool into the Wolverine V-arm. Adjust the arm length to achieve the desired bevel angle. Use the angle-setting gauge or a protractor to verify.
  2. Position: Rest the tool bevel flat against the wheel with the motor off. The entire bevel should contact the wheel surface.
  3. Start the grinder: With light pressure, begin rotating the tool handle to sweep the flute across the wheel. For a fingernail grind, rotate approximately 90° each direction from the center flute position.
  4. Consistent pressure: Maintain even, light pressure. The tool should glide smoothly—never force it into the wheel.
  5. Check frequently: Stop and inspect the edge. A thin, consistent line of light along the edge indicates material still to remove. When no light reflects from the edge, it is sharp.
  6. Burr removal: A slight burr may form on the inside of the flute. Remove it with a diamond hone or slip stone.

Sharpening a Skew Chisel

The skew has two flat bevels ground at 25-30°. Use the Wolverine platform: 1. Set the platform angle to achieve the desired bevel. 2. Lay the bevel flat on the wheel, maintaining the skew angle of the edge. 3. Grind one side with 2-3 light passes, then flip and grind the other side equally. 4. The edge should be straight and centered on the blade thickness.

Raising a Scraper Burr

Scrapers cut with a burr, not a ground edge: 1. Grind the scraper top face at 70-80° on the platform. 2. After grinding, use a hardened burnishing rod or the back of a round HSS tool. 3. Draw the burnisher firmly across the top edge at a slight upward angle (5-10° above horizontal). 4. This rolls a microscopic burr that acts as the cutting edge. 5. The burr can be refreshed 3-4 times with the burnisher before re-grinding is needed.

Tool Maintenance Best Practices

  • Storage: Store tools in a rack or roll—never loose in a drawer where edges contact each other
  • Handle inspection: Check ferrules for looseness and handles for cracks before each session
  • Rust prevention: Apply a light coat of paste wax or camellia oil to blades after each session
  • Grinding wheel maintenance: Dress aluminum oxide wheels with a star-wheel or diamond dresser when they become glazed or loaded. CBN wheels require only occasional cleaning with a crepe rubber block.
  • Tool rest maintenance: File any nicks or grooves in the tool rest surface that could catch tools during turning

Key Talking Points

  • Sharpening is a skill that requires practice—expect 10-20 sessions before it becomes consistent
  • A perfectly sharp tool should cut cleanly with almost no pressure
  • Scrapers need their burr refreshed more often than gouges need re-grinding
  • Never grind more than necessary—you are removing tool life with every pass

Learning Objectives (Concept Check)

  • Can students demonstrate the gouge-sharpening procedure using a jig?
  • Can students raise a proper burr on a scraper?
  • Do students understand when a tool needs sharpening vs. burr refreshing?

Last Updated: 2026-03-19