Fred Rowe
Well-Known Member
Grinding swedges can be a frustrating affair. Getting both sides even can be a challenge.
The pic shows a swedge that took ten minutes to grind. Both sides are exactly the same.
This swedge is ground with a compound angle of 54 degrees. If you look at the top of the grind you can see the wire edge developed by the grind.
These grinds are easy to do using a Bubble Jig.
This is ground into a section of 1/4inch mild steel plate.
There were no lay out lines used on the edge or the flat, just counted the passes on the belt.
This is at 120 grit.
We should have the full video of how to do this grind ready by the middle of next week.
It will be posted here on Knifedogs and on the BubbleJig.com website.
Happy grinding, Fred
The pic shows a swedge that took ten minutes to grind. Both sides are exactly the same.
This swedge is ground with a compound angle of 54 degrees. If you look at the top of the grind you can see the wire edge developed by the grind.
These grinds are easy to do using a Bubble Jig.
This is ground into a section of 1/4inch mild steel plate.
There were no lay out lines used on the edge or the flat, just counted the passes on the belt.
This is at 120 grit.
We should have the full video of how to do this grind ready by the middle of next week.
It will be posted here on Knifedogs and on the BubbleJig.com website.
Happy grinding, Fred
