I use a fishtail gouge for heavy wood removal in some areas and a big flat chisel in others... the gunstocker needs to know how to use them all.
Dan
Hey Dan, when you going to make us another "wood removal" video?
Methinks one cannot predict exactly which tools his bench should contain in the beginning as different boards can produce different challenges. That it's going to take several stocks to get the "most used/favored" tools sorted out as they'll vary by individual and his feel/sharpening skills, and of course the final say comes from the grain.
That's my love/hate thing with wood-just when you get the grain figgered--it
changes or you're done with that section and have to go learn another. This is about all I've learned so far in stocking: Doing good work in wood with hand tools is mostly a matter of reading/adapting to the flow of the grain.
I've just added a
real gouge (not the tiny inletting sort) and a cabinet makers rasp to my bench and spoke shave-since last time. Probably add more this year. Eventually some things will fall from favor and others will rise-
As the Grain Turns.
I'm cheap and spokeshaves last forever while rasps dull. So I save the rasps for as where the spokeshave doesn't work well and for finishing work after using the spokeshave...
Excellent point. As Townie might have said: Only
sharp woodwoorking tools are interesting.
Now for the ultimate in rasps, go dig up the hand-stitched rasps thread and find the Liogier company and all those beatimus tools they make. I could spend major wampum there in a few minutes.
Oh my i just dug this up, a well-done wood-working video featuring Liogier tools and a lot of other stuff, time-lapse. Not a gunstock, but a few days of carving compressed in to 2 minutes, then finishing/display and a recap of the rasps: 3:47 total time.