Showing posts with label Stanley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stanley. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 20, 2020

A chisel, a jeweler drill and a surform blade

Continuing in my series:
A few small tools


Wood Chisel

That little chisel spoke to me from a distance, its overall shape was saying, I'm Swedish.
And sure enough it is stamped ESTEEL Sweeden.

Swedish chisels (and scrapers and saws plate and etc) are prized for their steel.
There are various steels around the world named from their origins: Sheffield England, Soligen Germany etc, the differences being in the alloy and the quality of the iron ore used. 
Fun fact Sheffield England steel contain Swedish iron ore.

The resulting steel properties are what make the difference in how sharp and edge you can raise and how tough and resilient that edge would be.  Too soft it sharpen fast but does not keep a sharp edge long.  To hard, hard to sharpen and edge break easily.  It is a balancing act.

Swedish chisels have a well deserved reputation for being excellent performer in that regard.

some rust spot mostly where stamped

Bit of a label left
but unable to read much??

1/4 inch chisel

about 8-1/2 in long

ESTEEL SWEEDEN

all cleaned up.
The edge, as found is sharp, it cuts.
Oh, need a good touch up to bring it up to my standards but well care for that one

Archidemes, Archimedean drill, Double spiral drill, Jeweler drill, Push drill  

All these names described essentially the same tool.
They all have a double twist spiral on a central shaft.  Pushing down/up a bobbin or a side handle cause the drilling implement to rotate CW on the down push and CCW on the return pull.

They came in various forms, some with some sort of weight to give it spinning momentum.

Some variations of the tool
Notice the early spear head bits
Pic from Dictionary of woodworking tools by RA Salaman

The smallest ones, never had them, flywheel or side handle. These would be the jeweler types, such as I found.

From Top to Bottom
Craftsman (Millers-Falls) push drill, fully enclosed mechanism
The one I found, now cleaned up.  Driven by the bobbin.
My previous jeweler drill, a miniature push drill

The driving bobbin is simply kerf in each corner (metal insert) to let the rod twist 
when bobbin is pushed down or reverse when pull up.
The indent in the bobbin would allow the use of a small bow to drive it.
Incidentally the Bow drill is considered one of the more ancient drilling tool, 
the pump drill coming after.

The rod at the top is secured by a screw in nut cover which thread over the captive metal threaded receptacle

Taken apart, notice the nice pointy and shiny end to the rod

That crimp ring retain the nut captive

As far as the nut will go.
The pointy end serve as a friction bearing, just metal on metal contact, 
hence why so shiny :-)
Put in a dab of grease on reassembly.

The business end has a small mandrel 

which seems to be lead soldered to the shaft (?)

The jaw fully close
De-rusted, cleaned, lubricated, works like a charm ??


Hold on, they can be tricky to use for the un-initiated.
Let me explain.

Unlike today's drilling implement which always rotate in the same direction (FWD or REV) on some power tools, these push drills rotate one direction, then reverse direction, while you are still maintaining cutting pressure, but nothing seems to be happening fast...why??

Wrong drilling implement is the most glaring reason, they can cut pretty fast with the right dill bit, in the right material.  NOT necessarily wood!!

First question is, what size bits will it take.

5/64 fits well, next size up I have is 3/32 (6/64) barely fit, tight, not forcing it.
Too small to take my 5/64 push drills Z bits

Because the cutting action can happens in both directions (FWD & REV) a normal twist metal drill such as I have chucked in, is not very efficient.  Ever try to drill with your power drill in reverse?  Not very good is it ?? :-)

Some of the original drill bits would had been spear head,

This 19 century brace bit is a modified form of the ancestral spear bit

The opposite angled groove on each side, makes it cut with 
 more of a shearing action than a scrapping action.
This bit was marketed as a countersink bit for soft metal and iron objects, 
accommodate 90 degree taper screw heads.

and later superseded by more efficient implements: Enter the Gouge bits or the more modern Z bits especially designed for push drills.

Later Stanley would replace those and supply regular twist drill bit on a Yankee shaft.
A good indication that by then they were not the hand tool powerhouse they once were 
and forgot everything they used to know about tools :-(

The differences, they both cut in both directions, as opposed to the spear bit which is more of a scrapper action.  The spear bit is probably one of the most ancient drill implement.

If you only used a push drill with the ubiquitous metal twist drill bit, you have no idea how well and quickly this thing can drill.

Top, bigger hole drilled quickly with a Z bit.  Had to stop before I drill through :-)
The other hole, with metal twist bit used in the bobbin driven jeweler drill, did cut, but a lot slower, and nowhere as deep with roughly the same amount of driving forces.  
I would had run out of juice before I went thru that pine...

There is the Z bit secret. Two cutting edges, one for each directions.  
YES, that push drill is secured in the newly restored Starrett vise, and NO I am not worry about marring or scratching it.  Does not take much force to grip it securely, its a Starrett :-) 
And I can see the start of rust on my drill chuck.  Damn you rust, don't you ever sleep?? :-)

And finally in comparison, the other smaller jeweler drill.
with the same drill bit used in the bigger jeweler drill.
It barely made a scratch...


Why is that? It is not designed to drill wood but rather thin composite, plastic, metals and etc.  
I used it a lot to drill my own PCBs back in the days, for which a regular twist drill is fine, and even a nail would work (acting like a spear bit).  But you do not have the rotational forces nor can put on as much down pressure to it compared to the bigger jeweler drill which managed thru the wood, albeit nowhere as efficiently as the Z bit.

Of course they are limitations on how small a gouge or Z bit you can make...

One last thing, do not confuse these double spiral drills with the more common Yankeee Automatic screwdrivers.  They both works similarly, pushing down cause rotation, except a screwdriver does not rotate on the up stroke, otherwise you will be screwing and unscrewing.  You have to reverse a mechanism to unscrew.  Biggest tell tale are the spirals on both tools.  Henceforth not all bits found to fit your spiral drill are drilling implements.

STANLEY Surform blade

One of the most exciting  for me was perhaps, the less expensive of the pieces I picked up.
An original Stanley Canada Surform blade still in its original cellophane wrapper.
How old is it?  We have a few clues on the package


Stanley operated the Canadian branch at Roxton Pond from 1907-1984
Pat No shown is 2769225  awarded Nov 1956.
That Patent makes it just about as old as I am :-)

Well preserved for its age, just like me :-)



Original price sticker from Simpson's store
Was Robert Simpson, Simpson, Simpson-Sears, Sears Canada.
The price Cdn $1.70 sounds like late 60s

That one is staying put inside its cellophane wrapper, as is :-)

Bob, running out of rusty implements?? Have no fear !! :-)

Tuesday, May 19, 2020

Stanley No 60-1/2 Resurrected

The block plane I picked up look like a basket case a first sight but, if nothing else I could always used it for parts.
I would not pay much for a basket case, save for parts.  So nothing to loose really.
NOT for the faint of heart, yes that is a lot of elbow grease involved, but worth it.
And, very important to me, I did not erase any marks of its manufacture. Casting flaws, coarse linishing marks, etc, just stop the rust and leave original finish, wherever I can.
Why?  As a collector, all of these marks are important, down to the flaky shellac or varnish over the colored wood.  We need it "as is" to study the tool.  Not all tools acquired by collectors end up shiny on a shelf.  We are interested in the tool history, its makers, how it was built and etc.  Important as part of Type studies.

If I was selling tools (I AM NOT) that is as much as I would do to salvage the tool and ensuring no cracks, defects, missing or broken parts etc.  Leave the final tweaking to its next owner.
And personally once I'm done documenting and studying, all I'm interested is putting it back to work as a user, not as a show pieces.

I blogged about this model before, so I will just link back to it for its history.
This would be mostly a pictorial documentation from as found to cleaned up

As found
Yes, it is a tad rusted.
But is it past redemption??

Nothing moves, everything is frozen in rust.
Pretty much a lump of rust.
It's either save me now or forget about me soon ...

The center bolt, look like an alloy, the only shiny thing on it 
and looks like a tad short replacement. And the only thing not stuck, 
so obviously not made of steel.

Sole and sides are totally covered in rust, 
hopefully it has not pitted too much yet 
so that it can still be saved??

The blade bevel up

Back side.
Yes, will require some elbow grease before it gleams once more :-)

Stanley MADE IN ENGLAND
It is an English made plane
but still japanned black

Evaporust to the rescue.  That stuff literally dissolved rust and will not attack good metal, only the rust.  You can leave it soaking for as along as needed without fear of damages.  
My No 1 all time rust removal techniques.  Not cheap, about  Cdn $33 for a 4 liter jug, but worth its weight in gold :-)

First time out of the Evaporust soak, about one hour later
Look not too bad...

But under the flash, lots of rust blooms shows up, back soaking

Looking pretty pitted but far enough 

The sole is going to need more soaking, brushing, soaking repeat and rinse.
In order for the chemical to do its job thoroughly and keep your precious liquid cleaner 
and more active, scrubbing under running water is important to expose fresh rust.
Yes Evaporust is reusable.  

Front sliding plate is still suck pretty good. 
Starting to be able to push in a putty knife on both side.
More soaking etc...
Have to be gentle all too easy to damage plate or plane casting.

It finally came out unhurt, pretty gunky inside.
Dissolved crap from Evaporust action

After a few repeated soaks, scrub with a steel brush, soak and repeat.
That is when I stop soaking, when the flash no longer
 picks up brownish rust bloom

Quick passes on 80 grit runway.
Yes that would sand away just fine, but there is not really a need to go much shinier 
as long as sole does not scratches.  To fettle it better it would need to be sanded 
until front of mouth is shiny, back of mouth look even already

And the final look for now.  All I'm interested at this point is to stop further deterioration and make sure everything works and no broken or missing parts. 

Fine as is for now, will not keep on rusting


The Japanning is in great shape under all that gook I removed

You can now see clearly the stamping.
The big scratches are original, from the coarse linishing they used

I did not sanded the sides, just Evaporust and wire wheel
then protected by Autosol

It will make a fine tool in my son's kits.
Have not road tested it yet, but everything on it works as it should.

A lump of rust, it is no more, it is back to life as a tool.

Bob, with rusty tears in his eyes, moving on to the next candidate :-)