Slide 002: Sharpening Theory and Grinding Equipment¶
Slide Visual¶

Slide Overview¶
This slide covers the principles of tool sharpening, grinding equipment options, and the technique for producing consistent, effective edges on wood turning tools.
Instruction Notes¶
Why Sharpening Matters¶
A sharp turning tool cuts cleanly with minimal force, producing smooth surfaces and thin shavings. A dull tool tears wood fibers, creates dust, requires excessive force (increasing catch risk), and generates heat that accelerates further dulling. Professional turners sharpen every 15-20 minutes of active turning.
Grinding Equipment Options¶
Slow-Speed Bench Grinder (1725 RPM) The most common sharpening setup. Uses 6" or 8" aluminum oxide wheels. Slow speed reduces heat buildup compared to standard 3450 RPM grinders. White aluminum oxide wheels (60-80 grit) cut cooler than gray wheels and are preferred for HSS tools.
CBN (Cubic Boron Nitride) Wheels Premium abrasive wheels with industrial diamond-like hardness. Mount on standard bench grinders. Advantages: never need dressing, cut extremely cool, maintain flat grinding surface, last 10+ years. Available in 80, 180, and 350 grit. The 180 grit is the most versatile single wheel.
Wet Grinder (Tormek-style) A 10" stone wheel rotates through a water trough at approximately 90 RPM. Eliminates heat concerns entirely. Produces a finer edge than bench grinders but removes metal more slowly. Includes a leather honing wheel for final burr removal.
Sharpening Jig Systems¶
| System | Type | Key Feature | Price Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wolverine | Bench grinder jig | V-arm and platform for gouges | $100-150 |
| Tormek | Wet grinder + jigs | Complete system, water-cooled | $500-800 |
| Easy Wood Tools | Carbide insert system | No sharpening needed—replace tips | $80-200/tool |
| CBN wheel + Wolverine | Hybrid | Best combo of speed and cool cutting | $250-350 |
Bevel Angle Reference¶
| Tool | Recommended Angle | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Spindle roughing gouge | 45° | Straight across grind |
| Spindle gouge | 30-40° | Fingernail/Irish grind |
| Bowl gouge | 45-55° (standard), 55-65° (swept back) | Swept-back for aggressive cuts |
| Skew chisel | 25-30° | Both bevels equal |
| Parting tool | 25-30° | Both sides ground equally |
| Scraper | 70-80° | Burr raised with burnisher after grinding |
Avoiding Overheating¶
HSS can tolerate grinding heat better than carbon steel, but excessive heat still degrades performance. Rules: - Light pressure against the wheel—let the abrasive do the work - Keep the tool moving across the wheel face - Quench in water frequently (for carbon steel—HSS can air-cool) - If the edge turns blue, you have overheated it and must grind past the discolored zone
Key Talking Points¶
- A dull tool is more dangerous than a sharp one
- Consistent bevel angle is more important than mirror polish
- CBN wheels are the best long-term investment for turning tool sharpening
- Scraper edges require a burr—the burr IS the cutting edge
Learning Objectives (Concept Check)¶
- Can students identify the correct bevel angle for each tool type?
- Can students explain why slow-speed grinders are preferred?
- Do students understand the difference between grinding and honing?
Last Updated: 2026-03-19