Members jbird Posted March 19, 2009 Members Report Posted March 19, 2009 (edited) Howdy all and good day So after using and using the round knife my bone is this I don't have any trouble geting it sharp but its the grab of the surface below I have poked around this question and I am wondering is there a surface I can cut on that dosent grab or do I just muscle throw this any and all input is wanted thanks all Josh Edited March 19, 2009 by jbird Quote Josh Dusty Chaps Leather & Seven O Saddle Shop 801-809-8456 Keep moving forward! On a horse. Hebrews 4:12 My link
Members Tkleather1 Posted March 19, 2009 Members Report Posted March 19, 2009 Howdy all and good daySo after using and using the round knife my bone is this I don't have any trouble geting it sharp but its the grab of the surface below I have poked around this question and I am wondering is there a surface I can cut on that dosent grab or do I just muscle throw this any and all input is wanted thanks all Josh I have had this same problem with my cutting surface, I use a hdpe sheet for my cutting surface and found that less muscle was the answer. If you get your knife very sharp then you shouldnt have to use wo much downforce to cut the leather. I fought and fought myself for a long time trying to figure out what was going wrong and found that I was jsut using too much down pressure. Hope this helps Quote Tim Worley TK-Leather If you don't ask and dont try how are you gonna learn anything?
Members Rawhide Posted March 19, 2009 Members Report Posted March 19, 2009 I have had this same problem with my cutting surface, I use a hdpe sheet for my cutting surface and found that less muscle was the answer. If you get your knife very sharp then you shouldnt have to use wo much downforce to cut the leather. I fought and fought myself for a long time trying to figure out what was going wrong and found that I was jsut using too much down pressure.Hope this helps I found that the regular plastic cutting boards at wally world work great. It's soft enough, not to damage the blade, but doesn't have a grain for the knife to try and follow. If you're using a cutting mat, it will 'grab' the blade and make the knife harder to push. A good way to tell if your knife is sharp, insert it into the leather and pull the leather into the knife, if it glides through, it's sharp. Quote Marlon
Members jwwright Posted March 19, 2009 Members Report Posted March 19, 2009 Personally, I seldom put downward force on a round knife, and don't use a "rocking" motion. I use mine to push forward through the leather. The knife does not come into contact with the surface of the table very often. JW Quote www.jwwrightsaddlery.com
Members Tkleather1 Posted March 19, 2009 Members Report Posted March 19, 2009 Personally, I seldom put downward force on a round knife, and don't use a "rocking" motion. I use mine to push forward through the leather. The knife does not come into contact with the surface of the table very often. JW that is what I was trying to say, but you say it better Quote Tim Worley TK-Leather If you don't ask and dont try how are you gonna learn anything?
Members jbird Posted March 19, 2009 Author Members Report Posted March 19, 2009 well that must be it to much downward thrust. But I still am wondering with that small amount of force how do judge if you have cut all the threw the leather. Josh Quote Josh Dusty Chaps Leather & Seven O Saddle Shop 801-809-8456 Keep moving forward! On a horse. Hebrews 4:12 My link
Moderator bruce johnson Posted March 19, 2009 Moderator Report Posted March 19, 2009 Josh, That is the biggest problem I had starting with a round knife was knowing where that tip was. I thought I had to keep it pushed down. Once someone explained to me that the slicing action kept the blade down, it was a lot easier. I likewise use a piece of HDPE on my cutting table. I pretty much use mine like JW. Some guys make cuts off the edge of the table, and I do that for blocking and trimming stiffer leather sometimes. Some guys will cut on glass too. There is some debate on that, and I'll let someone else slug out the merits of that. I skive on glass sometimes. The biggest problem I have is making tighter inside curves. I catch the blade tip in the cutting surface and snap off that corner. I have an older smaller pointed (Philadelphia pattern?) knife I mostly try to remember to use for these curves. Doing them on glass would prevent that. Quote Bruce Johnson Malachi 4:2 "the windshield's bigger than the mirror, somewhere west of Laramie" - Dave Stamey Vintage Refurbished And Selected New Leather Tools For Sale - www.brucejohnsonleather.com
hidepounder Posted March 19, 2009 Report Posted March 19, 2009 When I'm on the cutting table I lift my leather so that my knife doesn't come in contact with the table. Someone told me that I shouldn't do that because it is dangeous, but that is what I prefer to do. I always rough cut out of the hide and then take the piece back to the bench where I dip it in water, slick it, and then cut to my lines. While cutting on the bench I use a different knife, on a cutting board made that white poly/plastic? material they use for commercial cutting boards. When it gets too carved up, I sand it down smooth with a belt sander. I use glass to skive on...it saves my knife and allows me to skive very thin. I broke my skiving plate a while back and have using my bench top which is a chemical lab counter top. It works okay. I discovered that it is very handy to have different round/head knifes for different functions. I keep a small Rose knife that never touches anything but wet leather, I use a Bill Buchman knife to rough cut out of the hide, a small Gomph for general purpose cutting at my bench and a large Gomph for skiving on the bench. I don't NEED all these knives, I'm just a tool-aholic, but it seems like my knives all cut better and last longer doing different functions. (it's probably all in my head!). The biggest trick of course is getting them REALLY sharp! That's what takes all the muscle out of cutting. Bob Quote
Members TrooperChuck Posted March 19, 2009 Members Report Posted March 19, 2009 I hated trying to make small diameter inside cuts with my round knife. Then, somewhere I saw a hint about using a leather punch to cut out those curves. I got a set of large diameter circle punches, they go up to 3/4 inch, and I since I started using them to cut out tight curves I've found the sun shines brighter, music sounds sweeter, and my wife hears fewer naughty words coming from my shop. Quote "Courage is being scared to death, but saddling up anyway." (John Wayne)
Ambassador Luke Hatley Posted March 19, 2009 Ambassador Report Posted March 19, 2009 TROPPER CHUCK................ now you are using your head for something than to seperate your ears......... you will find out that there is an awful lot of things that will work for you. i did.......... Quote Luke
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.