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Thread: A miter saw rehab - new handle with the lambs tongue

  1. #1

    A miter saw rehab - new handle with the lambs tongue

    I've been watching everyone making new saws, making them from kits, or making new handles for old saws so I thought I join in the fun. I also wanted to do a test run since my Wenzloff kit has an ebony handle. This is an old Lakeside miter saw. I made the handle from Grenadillo which is very hard so I should be ready for the ebone soon. I think the wood looks very much like east indian rosewood or maybe a dark cocobolo. Anyway, there were some mistakes and glitches but it turned out well for an initial attempt. I especially like the lambs tongue detail. I'll have to be more careful next time to make sure I don't have the chip out in some of the other places though, thats what the funny detail around the forward horn is all about Attached are number of photos so let me know what you think. The last one shows the inspiration at the top (and a stealth gloat), the board and the plan, and then the donor saw with the template and a Howard Marshall handle I used as a pattern.CheersPat
    Attached Images Attached Images

  2. #2
    Join Date
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    Nice handle, very good for a first try or for that matter, any try.

    What is the story on the saw nuts?

    Is the saw still in a miter box?

  3. #3
    Lowell, thanks for the kind words. The saw nuts are just some old brass saw nuts from another saw. The originals to this saw were nickel. I have three miter boxes and about a dozen miter saws so its not necessarily in a box right now but could be.
    Pat

  4. very nice! Much better than my first dozen....

    Cheers Pedder

  5. #5
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    Nice job! In case you have not found them yet Mike Wenzloff offers quite a few old classic templates for saw handles on his web page. You could have gotten away with not mentioning the errors. I may have to replace my mitre saw handle too, unless I can tighten it up with some West Systems product when it gets here.

  6. #6
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    That's super nice looking. I love lambs tongue handles. Great work!

  7. #7
    Hi Pat,

    true mastership will be achieved when a little accident can be changed into a design feature. I like the fine sculptured shape especially around the lambs tongue. The wood choice is great as well.

    Obviously you went with the existing screw holes in the blade to lay out the screw positions. There's nothing wrong to drill new holes into an old blade if it will be rehandeled at least if the new handle has larger cheeks than the original handle had.

    Cheers
    Klaus
    Klaus Kretschmar

  8. #8
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    Grenadillo was used for clarinets a lot. I made a guitar from it once. It is a good,hard wood. Your handle looks nice. Keep working,and look at high quality handles when ever you can. Remember their details.

  9. #9
    Join Date
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    As Klaus said, your accident/design feature is what sets some craftsman apart from the others. Incorperating a flaw seamlessly into the design is much harder than we assume it to be. If you had not mentioned it i would have assumed it to be a bit of your personal touch on the original design, which in fact it still is. Very well done, working with such hard woods is not at all easy.

    I have been making some drawers and a jewelry box in some Honduras Rosewood and am starting to hate the wood. Cutting joinery is just eating my saws and edges up. It has given me much more respect to the people that do such great work in such dense woods.

  10. #10
    Quote Originally Posted by Pedder Broockmann View Post
    very nice! Much better than my first dozen....

    Cheers Pedder
    I doubt that but thanks for the kind words
    pat

  11. #11
    Quote Originally Posted by Mike Holbrook View Post
    Nice job! In case you have not found them yet Mike Wenzloff offers quite a few old classic templates for saw handles on his web page. You could have gotten away with not mentioning the errors. I may have to replace my mitre saw handle too, unless I can tighten it up with some West Systems product when it gets here.
    I have found the templates and that's pretty nice of Mike to let us hacks use them.
    thanks the nice words
    pat

  12. #12
    Quote Originally Posted by Chris Griggs View Post
    That's super nice looking. I love lambs tongue handles. Great work!
    thanks Chris!!
    Pat

  13. #13
    Quote Originally Posted by Klaus Kretschmar View Post
    Hi Pat,

    true mastership will be achieved when a little accident can be changed into a design feature. I like the fine sculptured shape especially around the lambs tongue. The wood choice is great as well.

    Obviously you went with the existing screw holes in the blade to lay out the screw positions. There's nothing wrong to drill new holes into an old blade if it will be rehandeled at least if the new handle has larger cheeks than the original handle had.

    Cheers
    Klaus
    thanks Klaus, your saws are an inspiration to all of us, truly works of art.

    I was going to drill new holes but didn't have a tough enough bit. I have some on order though.

    thanks again
    pat

  14. #14
    Quote Originally Posted by george wilson View Post
    Grenadillo was used for clarinets a lot. I made a guitar from it once. It is a good,hard wood. Your handle looks nice. Keep working,and look at high quality handles when ever you can. Remember their details.
    thanks George. I'll keep looking at those high quality handles so you and Klaus better keep posting pics
    thanks again
    pat

  15. #15
    Quote Originally Posted by Tony Shea View Post
    As Klaus said, your accident/design feature is what sets some craftsman apart from the others. Incorperating a flaw seamlessly into the design is much harder than we assume it to be. If you had not mentioned it i would have assumed it to be a bit of your personal touch on the original design, which in fact it still is. Very well done, working with such hard woods is not at all easy.

    I have been making some drawers and a jewelry box in some Honduras Rosewood and am starting to hate the wood. Cutting joinery is just eating my saws and edges up. It has given me much more respect to the people that do such great work in such dense woods.
    Thanks Tony, those errors were so fresh in mind, I just thought they glared at everyone as well. But your right, I work in the software industry and as we say there "its not a bug, its a feature" .
    cheers
    pat

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