dd

"doc44"

11/02/2005 11:39 PM

Blade Sharpening Opinion

I just received my new Wood Worker II for Forrest today. I plan to install
it tomorrow. Now the question is do I send in the old Craftsman blade in for
sharpening or just keep it around for ruff work. Is it even worth the
shipping and sharpening cost?


This topic has 20 replies

Pn

Phisherman

in reply to "doc44" on 11/02/2005 11:39 PM

12/02/2005 2:23 PM

Walt:

Check out Forrest Manufacturing Company (1-800-733-7111). These
folks are the pros. They sharpen any carbide saw blade. They will
even replace tips. Cost ranges, depending on # teeth, blade size.
For example, 16-32 teeth up to 12" dia and up to 3/16" kerf runs about
$18+shipping. They claim 3-5 day turn around.

On Sat, 12 Feb 2005 13:56:47 GMT, "Walt Conner" <[email protected]>
wrote:

>>>Now the question is do I send in the old Craftsman blade in for sharpening
>
>> $15 to have it sharpened.
>
>Would you please tell me where you are talking about sending it to be
>sharpened. Does Craftsman have a sharpen service? I wouldn't think Forrest
>would fool with a Craftsman blade? I have a Craftsman blade I would like to
>have sharpened soon. No good sharpen service here.
>
>Walt Conner
>

Nn

Nova

in reply to "doc44" on 11/02/2005 11:39 PM

12/02/2005 4:46 PM

Leon wrote:

> While Forrest does an excellent job and that is where I send my blades, they
> are in business to make money and not discriminate against brands of blades.
> I send mine in with instructions to do such and such repairs and to call me
> if the repairs will be more than x amount of dollars.

In my area their are about eight local saw sharpening services. They are listed
in the yellow pages under "Saw - Sharpening & Repair" and also "Sharpening
Services". I asked a few contractors who they would recommend before selecting
one. I get my saw, planer and jointer blades sharpened at the same place. I
recently found out that, unfortunately, they don't straighten bent blades.

Leon, I was wondering what Forrest charged to straighten your blade when you
tilted the blade with a zero clearance insert in the saw. About two weeks ago I
did the same thing to my WWII.

--
Jack Novak
Buffalo, NY - USA
(Remove "SPAM" from email address to reply)

TD

Tim Douglass

in reply to "doc44" on 11/02/2005 11:39 PM

13/02/2005 9:19 AM

On Sun, 13 Feb 2005 17:07:30 GMT, "Edwin Pawlowski" <[email protected]>
wrote:

>
>"Tim Douglass" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>>
>> I'm curious about how you package the blade for shipping. Do you just
>> use cardboard or would it make sense to build a custom blade case for
>> shipping them?
>>
>> Tim Douglass
>
>Cardboard works. That is how mine came back also. Wrap it in a couple
>thicknesses of newspaper, sandwich between two heavy sheets of cardboard and
>off it goes.

UPS? Post Office? FedEx?

I should have asked that the first time. I'm not sure I'd trust UPS
with a $100 saw blade unless it was wrapped in armor plate.

Tim Douglass

http://www.DouglassClan.com

EP

"Edwin Pawlowski"

in reply to "doc44" on 11/02/2005 11:39 PM

13/02/2005 6:04 PM


"Tim Douglass" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>
> UPS? Post Office? FedEx?
>
> I should have asked that the first time. I'm not sure I'd trust UPS
> with a $100 saw blade unless it was wrapped in armor plate.

Any of the above. I used UPS because they pickup at work every day. I've
shipped and received very expensive items via UPS with no problems. With
the millions of packages they handle, they have a very low claim rate. Saw
blades are rather rugged anyway. I've shipped $5,000 electronic controllers
with them.

Jk

Joe_Stein

in reply to "doc44" on 11/02/2005 11:39 PM

13/02/2005 4:14 AM

Nearly all my blades are Craftsman. I have them sharpened regularly by a
local guy (former co-worker).


doc44 wrote:
> I just received my new Wood Worker II for Forrest today. I plan to install
> it tomorrow. Now the question is do I send in the old Craftsman blade in for
> sharpening or just keep it around for ruff work. Is it even worth the
> shipping and sharpening cost?
>
>

EP

"Edwin Pawlowski"

in reply to "doc44" on 11/02/2005 11:39 PM

12/02/2005 3:46 PM


"Walt Conner" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>>>Now the question is do I send in the old Craftsman blade in for
>>>sharpening
>
>> $15 to have it sharpened.
>
> Would you please tell me where you are talking about sending it to be
> sharpened. Does Craftsman have a sharpen service? I wouldn't think Forrest
> would fool with a Craftsman blade? I have a Craftsman blade I would like
> to have sharpened soon. No good sharpen service here.
>
> Walt Conner


Craftsman does not have a service that I know of, but there are many other
places. Forrest is one, I've use Ridge Carbide
http://www.ridgecarbidetool.com/html/sharpening.htm My DeWalt blade came
back better than new. A 40 tooth blade will cost $12.75 + shipping. I sent
a couple of Feuds along with the DeWalt. Good job on all of them.

Forrest and Ridge are in business to make money. They make and sell new
blades, they sharpen old blades. Yes, they will do your Craftsman as well as
any other brand. Router bits too. As long as the blade was decent to begin
with, have it sharpened. There will always be rough work to be done and
you'd rather use a low cost blade for that.
--
Ed
http://pages.cthome.net/edhome/

EP

"Edwin Pawlowski"

in reply to "doc44" on 11/02/2005 11:39 PM

12/02/2005 5:37 AM


"doc44" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I just received my new Wood Worker II for Forrest today. I plan to install
>it tomorrow. Now the question is do I send in the old Craftsman blade in
>for sharpening or just keep it around for ruff work. Is it even worth the
>shipping and sharpening cost?

Depends. If it is the $10 blade, it is probably not worth spending $15 to
have it sharpened. If it is a $50 blade, by all means, get it done and keep
it for when your neighbor asks you to rip a couple of 4 x 4s. Always handy
to have a spare blade.
--
Ed
http://pages.cthome.net/edhome/

Lr

"Leon"

in reply to "doc44" on 11/02/2005 11:39 PM

13/02/2005 7:31 PM


"Tim Douglass" <[email protected]> wrote in message
.forrestblades.com/sharpprice.htm
>>
>
> I'm curious about how you package the blade for shipping. Do you just
> use cardboard or would it make sense to build a custom blade case for
> shipping them?


I used the same HD card board container that the blade originally comes in.

Pg

Patriarch

in reply to "doc44" on 11/02/2005 11:39 PM

13/02/2005 3:21 PM

"Edwin Pawlowski" <[email protected]> wrote in
news:[email protected]:

>> I should have asked that the first time. I'm not sure I'd trust UPS
>> with a $100 saw blade unless it was wrapped in armor plate.
>
> Any of the above. I used UPS because they pickup at work every day.
> I've shipped and received very expensive items via UPS with no
> problems. With the millions of packages they handle, they have a very
> low claim rate. Saw blades are rather rugged anyway. I've shipped
> $5,000 electronic controllers with them.
>

We regularly sent millions of dollars worth of electronic equipment with
UPS every month. As others have mentioned, national borders can raise the
need for preplanning.

More losses seem to have occured from mishandling in the warehouses than we
experienced with UPS or FedEx.

And you can insure...

Patriarch

Jj

John

in reply to "doc44" on 11/02/2005 11:39 PM

12/02/2005 11:33 AM

Forrest will sharpen ANY Brand blade if it is sharpenable at all

John

On Sat, 12 Feb 2005 13:56:47 GMT, "Walt Conner" <[email protected]>
wrote:

>>>Now the question is do I send in the old Craftsman blade in for sharpening
>
>> $15 to have it sharpened.
>
>Would you please tell me where you are talking about sending it to be
>sharpened. Does Craftsman have a sharpen service? I wouldn't think Forrest
>would fool with a Craftsman blade? I have a Craftsman blade I would like to
>have sharpened soon. No good sharpen service here.
>
>Walt Conner
>

Jm

"J"

in reply to "doc44" on 11/02/2005 11:39 PM

11/02/2005 8:58 PM

"doc44" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I just received my new Wood Worker II for Forrest today. I plan to install
> it tomorrow. Now the question is do I send in the old Craftsman blade in
for
> sharpening or just keep it around for ruff work. Is it even worth the
> shipping and sharpening cost?


Is it dull?

-j

Jj

John

in reply to "doc44" on 11/02/2005 11:39 PM

12/02/2005 11:32 AM

Probably less expensive to just replace the Crapsman blade than to
resharpen.

Blades that cost (and are worth) more than around $50 are probably
worth resharpening. Blades that cost less than around $25-30 are
probably a waste of money to resharpen. Save for doing the rough cuts
or cutting in wood that might have buried metal/nails/etc and save the
Forrest for the finish cuts and use in good wood

John

On Fri, 11 Feb 2005 23:39:13 -0500, "doc44"
<[email protected]> wrote:

>I just received my new Wood Worker II for Forrest today. I plan to install
>it tomorrow. Now the question is do I send in the old Craftsman blade in for
>sharpening or just keep it around for ruff work. Is it even worth the
>shipping and sharpening cost?
>

Lr

"Leon"

in reply to "doc44" on 11/02/2005 11:39 PM

13/02/2005 2:52 PM


"Nova" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...

>
> Leon, I was wondering what Forrest charged to straighten your blade when
> you
> tilted the blade with a zero clearance insert in the saw. About two weeks
> ago I
> did the same thing to my WWII.
>


LOL.. You know Jack it has been about 2 years since I had done that and
was well on my way to forgetting that brilliant move.

They charge by the hour and minimum is $6.75.
To sharpen, straighten, test cut and return shipping, $42. Not cheap but
the blade cut like new again.

Take a look here.

http://www.forrestblades.com/sharpprice.htm

Lr

"Leon"

in reply to "doc44" on 11/02/2005 11:39 PM

12/02/2005 3:58 PM


"Walt Conner" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>>>Now the question is do I send in the old Craftsman blade in for
>>>sharpening
>
>> $15 to have it sharpened.
>
> Would you please tell me where you are talking about sending it to be
> sharpened. Does Craftsman have a sharpen service? I wouldn't think Forrest
> would fool with a Craftsman blade? I have a Craftsman blade I would like
> to have sharpened soon. No good sharpen service here.
>
> Walt Conner

While Forrest does an excellent job and that is where I send my blades, they
are in business to make money and not discriminate against brands of blades.
I send mine in with instructions to do such and such repairs and to call me
if the repairs will be more than x amount of dollars.

TD

Tim Douglass

in reply to "doc44" on 11/02/2005 11:39 PM

13/02/2005 8:38 AM

On Sun, 13 Feb 2005 14:52:59 GMT, "Leon"
<[email protected]> wrote:

>They charge by the hour and minimum is $6.75.
>To sharpen, straighten, test cut and return shipping, $42. Not cheap but
>the blade cut like new again.
>
>Take a look here.
>
>http://www.forrestblades.com/sharpprice.htm
>

I'm curious about how you package the blade for shipping. Do you just
use cardboard or would it make sense to build a custom blade case for
shipping them?

Tim Douglass

http://www.DouglassClan.com

dd

"doc44"

in reply to "doc44" on 11/02/2005 11:39 PM

12/02/2005 12:05 AM

Getting there. Been using it for two years.

"J" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> "doc44" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>> I just received my new Wood Worker II for Forrest today. I plan to
>> install
>> it tomorrow. Now the question is do I send in the old Craftsman blade in
> for
>> sharpening or just keep it around for ruff work. Is it even worth the
>> shipping and sharpening cost?
>
>
> Is it dull?
>
> -j
>
>

EP

"Edwin Pawlowski"

in reply to "doc44" on 11/02/2005 11:39 PM

13/02/2005 5:07 PM


"Tim Douglass" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>
> I'm curious about how you package the blade for shipping. Do you just
> use cardboard or would it make sense to build a custom blade case for
> shipping them?
>
> Tim Douglass

Cardboard works. That is how mine came back also. Wrap it in a couple
thicknesses of newspaper, sandwich between two heavy sheets of cardboard and
off it goes.

EJ

"Eric J. Comeau"

in reply to "doc44" on 11/02/2005 11:39 PM

13/02/2005 11:48 PM

Hi guys:
A saw is a saw, unlike a ford car that only ford garage wants to work on it,
you can get it fixed at any good shop. I say fixed because there is a lot
more to a saw then just sharpening it. A cheap saw is punched and sharpen a
little and sold to some sucker out there. A good saw is cut by laser or
water today, heat treated, tensions, leveled and if carbide or stellite, the
tips are installed.

About every community has some kind of saw sharpening service but many of
them have no training or minimum training. The saw should be sharpen on the
face and the top of the tooth. Many saws will need to have the tension
adjusted and the lumps taken out. Most of these small saws, the lumps are
the biggest problems. Lumps are cause by heat. You remember that boxy
plank that was pinching the saw and your wife was talking to you and you
stop feeding to answer here, that will do it. Sometimes it does not take
much. I do my own saw but I have had to straighten a few small saw for my
previous boss.

Have to ever cursed those jig saw blades that do not cut. I have seen many
cheap ones that are punched then the teeth are set. On one side you get a
true corner but on the other side the corners and edges are all rounded. I
said true corner because I did not know what to call it, because they are
certainly not sharp. Buy a better quality blade and buy a saw with a long
stroke and you will wonder why you kept that $10 saw around so long.

Eric
"Joe_Stein" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Nearly all my blades are Craftsman. I have them sharpened regularly by a
> local guy (former co-worker).
>
>
> doc44 wrote:
>> I just received my new Wood Worker II for Forrest today. I plan to
>> install it tomorrow. Now the question is do I send in the old Craftsman
>> blade in for sharpening or just keep it around for ruff work. Is it even
>> worth the shipping and sharpening cost?

dd

"doc44"

in reply to "doc44" on 11/02/2005 11:39 PM

12/02/2005 10:40 AM

I was thinking about sending it to Forrest. It is the blade that came on my
saw when I bought it. Just don't know if the blade is worth the expense. You
can buy a new Woodworker II for forest for $89


"Phisherman" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Walt:
>
> Check out Forrest Manufacturing Company (1-800-733-7111). These
> folks are the pros. They sharpen any carbide saw blade. They will
> even replace tips. Cost ranges, depending on # teeth, blade size.
> For example, 16-32 teeth up to 12" dia and up to 3/16" kerf runs about
> $18+shipping. They claim 3-5 day turn around.
>
> On Sat, 12 Feb 2005 13:56:47 GMT, "Walt Conner" <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>>>>Now the question is do I send in the old Craftsman blade in for
>>>>sharpening
>>
>>> $15 to have it sharpened.
>>
>>Would you please tell me where you are talking about sending it to be
>>sharpened. Does Craftsman have a sharpen service? I wouldn't think Forrest
>>would fool with a Craftsman blade? I have a Craftsman blade I would like
>>to
>>have sharpened soon. No good sharpen service here.
>>
>>Walt Conner
>>
>

WC

"Walt Conner"

in reply to "doc44" on 11/02/2005 11:39 PM

12/02/2005 1:56 PM

>>Now the question is do I send in the old Craftsman blade in for sharpening

> $15 to have it sharpened.

Would you please tell me where you are talking about sending it to be
sharpened. Does Craftsman have a sharpen service? I wouldn't think Forrest
would fool with a Craftsman blade? I have a Craftsman blade I would like to
have sharpened soon. No good sharpen service here.

Walt Conner


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