The online community of knife collectors, A Knife Family Forged in Steel
Last night I sort of finished this kit:
(stock pic, mine doesn't look near that good)
Sort of? Well, it was a half vast effort at the end. My belt sander is too wide to fit between the guard and pommel. Not wanting to wait until I get a 1"x30" (it's moving to the top of the fun fund list though) I did some hand sanding. 60 grit used is a shoeshine manner didn't seem to be doing anything for the spacers so I did exactly what I knew I shouldn't do and promised myself I wouldn't do: I broke out the Dremel and sanding drum.
I knew going in I was going to goof something up and I did. I left some gouge marks on the guard and pommel. I'm not terribly worried since it was my first true effort at shaping a handle and I knew the end result would not match what I had in my mind's eye due to inexperience. I used it just as a learning experience and something I can look back on. Plus it confirmed that I do enjoy working with knives.
Why did I give all that info? Because it leads me to my question: if one didn't have access to power tools or for whatever reason had a design where you were forced to hand sand those fiber spacers, what is the best way to do it? What about the fastest (not necessarily the best) way?
I fully intend to have the proper tooling in the future but I figure it's worth discussing and getting ideas for those times when you HAVE to do it by hand.
Tags:
i do all my handles by hand, since im broke, and cannot afford machinary, and have no place to put it, so when i get to the spacers, just get a heavier grit sand paper, and a few hours of your day, a sanding block usually works pretty good to really grind it down, then i follow that with the shoeshine method to finish getting my final shape, i suck at making handles too, but like you i am a beginner.
Might take a bit longer, but a bandfile sander may work. I picked one up for under $20.00.
I'm only working on my first knife, but a small flat file works quite well on fibre spacers for me so far.
© 2024 Created by Jan Carter. Powered by