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Thread: Lie Nielsen Socket Chisels

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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Nov 2015
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    Philadelphia, PA
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    402

    Lie Nielsen Socket Chisels

    Hey all, I've spent a small fortune on Lie Nielsen socket chisels. While they're great as chisels, the fact that the handle constantly fall out drive me absolutely crazy, especially given the price.

    A. Is there a way to secure these handles and not ruin the chisels? I see no benefit or reason to take the handles off.
    B. Should I just sell these and get Veritas / Blue Spruce chisels? Feels like modifying these really nice chisels that are probably great for somebody seems like it might be silly if I could just sell them and get something that doesn't keep coming apart.

    Thoughts?

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Dec 2019
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    The old pueblo in el norte.
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    Sell them and get tang chisels. I only have that issue if I don't use them for a long time though.
    ~mike

    happy in my mud hut

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Apr 2021
    Location
    Austin, TX
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    668
    A little hair spray on the part of the handle that interfaces with the socket helps. There's likely a defect on that portion of the handle that is preventing the surfaces from mating (or maybe on the inside of the socket).

    Once I started grabbing and handling the chisels by the socket instead of the handle, I haven't had any issues. The wooden handle mostly just fills the palm when I use them.

    Using a wooden mallet to clear some dovetail waste will also set the handles in their socket firmly.

    If it bothers you, sell them! Lots of good chisel sets on the market.

  4. #4
    I used to have a couple socket chisels that would give me grief. I did the hair spray thing that Lie-Nielsen recommends and it worked a little. The solution for me was violin rosin. You can buy a piece for $5 shipped on Amazon. Just rub it on the handle portion and slam it home. It won’t come out without some effort.

  5. #5
    I know it's blasphemy, but I'd probably try to glue them on. I would think a little bit of contact cement would hold them together well enough, without being permanent. It would be easy enough to undue if it failed, anyway. I think Lie Neilsen recommends the hair spray trick, which is the same idea, but with a less aggressive adhesive.

    Though it might be better to sell them and get some tang chisels. I only use tang chisels for this reason. My humidity fluctuates too much here for wooden handled socket chisels.

  6. #6
    A small amount of epoxy will keep them put and can be easily removed by warming up the socket with a heat gun or even hair drier.

    Doesn't matter what chisels they are or who made them, if they don't work, fix them.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
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    Longview WA
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    The problem with the LN socket chisels vs the handles may be due to a few factors.

    Old socket chisels were not made to the degree of perfection the LN chisels can boast. This may cause a problem from the socket being too smooth. (more on this later)

    Another problem, that in the past, caused my socket chisel handles to sometimes slip was from the fit being slightly different from socket to handle. Anyone who has a lathe or taken the chuck off of a drill press is likely familiar with a Morse Taper's holding ability. The principle is the same with a socket chisel, though one of the components is made of hardwood. Two tapered pieces made to mate as exactly as possible will tend to stay mated, even without a blow from a mallet.

    A bit of texture inside the socket of a chisel can aid the holding ability of a socket chisel handle.

    Another advantage with an older chisel handle is there is likely some oxidation or other substance inside the socket from years of age. This helps when fitting a handle. It may be the handle going though the annual changes absorbed and released moisture leading to the oxidation inside the socket.

    For me the first part of fitting a handle to a socket chisel (this is after the handle has been formed on a lathe or by hand) is to check the taper. Lightly set the handle into the socket and try to wiggle it, side to side and to and fro. Any movement at this point indicates the tapers are not matched.

    Once the tapers are matched, hold the chisel and socket together and twist them in opposite directions. With an older chisel the oxidation inside will usually mark the high spots on the tenon of the handle. My finest rasp or file is used to lightly remove the marked spots. Repeat this until the tenon comes out of the socket evenly marked all around.

    With the LN chisels, it may help to run a small piece of sandpaper inside the socket. It may also help to drop some graphite from a pencil sharpener into the socket so it will be able to mark the handle's tenon.

    In my accumulation of socket chisels there were three that occasionally released from their handles. It has been over two years since they were given the full treatment and none of them have released since.

    One of these days, time will be found to make a new handle for a chisel and document the fitting.

    Need to find one of them round tuits.

    Round Tuit.jpg

    jtk
    "A pessimist sees the difficulty in every opportunity; an optimist sees the opportunity in every difficulty."
    - Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)

  8. #8
    LN recommends the hair spray fix. Also, as the summer approaches, the humidity will swell the handles. That and the spray and you're good to go. I've had mine forever. When they were new, I had the same problem. The spray fixed it.
    Last edited by les winter; 04-18-2024 at 5:33 AM.

  9. #9
    Quote Originally Posted by les winter View Post
    LN recommends the hair spray fix. Also, as the summer approaches, the humidity will swell the handles. That and the spray and you're good to go. I've had mine forever. When they were new, I had the same problem. The spray fixed it.
    Where I live, the opposite is correct.
    The summer months are dry, low humidity.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Sep 2009
    Location
    Atlanta, GA
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    6,433
    I had the same problem with my mortise chisels, in low-humidity months. The business end of a 1/2" mortise chisel is nothing to sneer at when it drops off the handle as you are picking it up. Serious weight and serious sharp accelerating towards my foot at 32'/sec/sec.

    Had no hairspray; had no other use for excess hairspray; could not figure out why I would ever want to switch handles. One teensy dab of thick CA glue solve the problem.
    When I started woodworking, I didn't know squat. I have progressed in 30 years - now I do know squat.

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Feb 2014
    Location
    Lake Gaston, Henrico, NC
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    9,181
    I'm going to add this probably useless bit of information for about anyone, but just in case it does anyone any good.

    I had this problem with one of my timber framing chisels. I work on golf clubs, and that involves installing and pulling shafts for trials of different types of shafts, mainly for drivers and other woods. These use composite shafts for a good long time now, and you have to be careful not to use too much heat to melt a multi-hundred dollar shaft. Golf club epoxy is designed to break down about 100 degrees lower than the laminating epoxy in the shafts which sounds like a large difference but even then it takes a Lot of force to pull the head and you have to be very careful.

    The other problem with even golf club epoxy is that it's hard to clean out of the hosel and off the pulled shaft. There is an adhesive that some tour vans use. It's plenty strong enough, but the main advantages are that it cures quickly and after heating to pull a shaft, it bubbles and crackles up to make a crispy layer that is very easy to clean away. It releases at a lower heat than even golf club epoxy does too.

    The drawbacks are that it requires a special gun for the duotubes it comes in, and that it's pretty expensive these days.

    I used it on my timber framing chisel that didn't want to keep the handle in and it worked fine. If I ever need to pull the handle, I'm sure it will be a simple job.

    I would not have bought it for the chisel job, but since I already had some, it was the ideal solution. I know the handle will not come out unless I want it to.

    The adhesive is 3M DP810. Put the double cap back on it after use and it lasts for years. I do keep it and other duotube adhesives and epoxies in a refrigerator.

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
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    Thanks for the information Tom. It is always interesting to learn about the so many other things used for a specialized purpose that have "crossover" utility in woodworking.

    As in another thread, one of my other sources for "crossover" materials is in the lapidary world. They have some very fine polishing abrasives and they also use some equipment that is useful in woodworking.

    jtk
    "A pessimist sees the difficulty in every opportunity; an optimist sees the opportunity in every difficulty."
    - Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)

  13. #13
    Join Date
    Aug 2019
    Location
    Pittsburgh, PA
    Posts
    860
    Aren't you supposed to fit this type of handles?

    The inside of my old chisel sockets are not smooth, the fit takes advantage of that. The picture below shows two chisels I've taken the time to fit properly and the third is a Stanley 750 with the factory fit. In other words, not fitted, it sticks out too much.

    I would imagine these LN chisels have smooth sockets and machine made handles. Considering the reputation this brand has, having to glue the handle so the chisel doesn't fall off is pretty bad.

    20240419_102604.jpg

  14. #14
    There is fitted and then there's fitted.
    Top chisel looks to be fitted well but maybe on the tight side.
    Middle chisel has virtually no gap, that's too tight. IMO
    The Stanley has too large of a gap, not necessary but not an issue other than aesthetics.
    More gap is better than no gap in this situation.
    The entire idea of a socket chisel is that it gets tighter when struck. It should only contact the sides of the socket not the bottom. If the handle is fitted too closely to the outside of the socket, splits in the wood can happen in that area and mushrooming can start. There needs to be "some" room for eventual movement. When the handle shrinks a bit and gets repeatedly struck, it needs room to set further into the socket, hence the need for extra room at the pictured connection area. If there is no room to move, the handle starts to mushroom the socket.
    Example of mushrooming just starting & handle splitting
    IMG_0719.jpg

    As to dry fitting, yes it works, but as others, as well as myself have said, ambient weather makes a difference.
    There is nothing wrong with some type of adhesive.

  15. #15
    Join Date
    Aug 2019
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    Pittsburgh, PA
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    860
    Quote Originally Posted by Edward Weber View Post
    The Stanley has too large of a gap, not necessary but not an issue other than aesthetics.
    That gap in the stanley chisel and others I have. When I grasp it, the rim of the socket digs into the skin of my palm when I tighten my grip while malleting. It's not a comfortable handle.

    The other two, much better. I don't know if the middle handle will go any deeper, I certainly malleted the crap out of it in the final fit. But if it does mushroom, that's not hard to cut off to tidy up the fit.

    The humidity in my workshop is relatively stable, no wild swings. Whether that helped or not, I don't know, I can't recall any socket handle falling off in the last few years. If any of the chisels did that I'd be pretty annoyed, specially if it landed on the concrete or my foot, even more it they were supposedly premium chisels. Handles made of a different wood species might perform better.

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