Members billymac814 Posted February 8, 2013 Members Report Posted February 8, 2013 I was pursuing eBay the other day and noticed Cowboy makes a pretty inexpensive splitter, similar to the Heritage type sold by Weavers. I sent Bob Kovar a message to find out if he sold these as well and he did and it was even 30.00 cheaper than the one on eBay. I bought one and it arrived today. So far it seems pretty decent for the price( about 170.00). I did spend a little time polishing the blade up on it. I don't recall ever seeing anyone mention these so I figured I'd post it. I haven't used it much as I've only had it an hour but it seems to work good. It should be a good alternative to those who are thinking of getting the cheap Tandy one. I have a crank splitter so this one will primarily be used for lap skives. Quote www.mccabescustomleather.com
Moderator bruce johnson Posted February 8, 2013 Moderator Report Posted February 8, 2013 Billy is right. I got one of these in a trade and they are really nice for lap skives. It is a keeper for just the laps. Match one of these up with a precision fixed thickness splitter like a Krebs or Chase pattern pull through splitter or a crank splitter and you can pretty well do anything you'd need to. The cam action is smooth and they just want to roll over without a stick or bind.. They have a set screw to limit the depth for tapering out to a fixed depth. The down side is using them as a splitter, There is not a way to hold the fixed depth for level splitting without holding the handle forward against the stop with one hand while you pull the strap with the other. If you are doing narrow straps without a lot of drag, that isn't a huge deal. Wider straps and it sure can be a little tough to one-hand them through. 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
Members billymac814 Posted February 8, 2013 Author Members Report Posted February 8, 2013 Bruce, I could be wrong as this is my first splitter of this type but it appears if I push the handle down the opposite way that it locks in place for fixed thicknesses. It seems to work doing it that way. The one thing I can't figure out is if I want an entire piece split how I would start it, it would seem you'd have to have it a little long to get some extra sticking out to have something to pull on. Quote www.mccabescustomleather.com
Contributing Member JLSleather Posted February 8, 2013 Contributing Member Report Posted February 8, 2013 I think that's what he just said? Quote "Observation is 9/10 of the law." IF what you do is something that ANYBODY can do, then don't be surprised when ANYBODY does.
Members billymac814 Posted February 8, 2013 Author Members Report Posted February 8, 2013 Looking at it again, it looks like if I push the handle away from me that the cam pushes up on the roller to do lap skives but if I pull it towards me the cam pushes against the base and in turn still pushes the roller up and against the set screw and basically locks in place for level splitting. Does that sound correct? There wasn't any instructions or anything so I can't say for sure what the proper operation is. Quote www.mccabescustomleather.com
Members billymac814 Posted February 8, 2013 Author Members Report Posted February 8, 2013 I think that's what he just said? Not entirely. He said you have to hold the handle down and pull through one handed. I'm saying I don't know how to start it even with two hands unless i start back sbout an inch. Once its started I'm able to pull it through. Quote www.mccabescustomleather.com
Moderator bruce johnson Posted February 8, 2013 Moderator Report Posted February 8, 2013 Start in the middle, pull it through, turn it around and pull the other way. 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
Members billymac814 Posted February 8, 2013 Author Members Report Posted February 8, 2013 Start in the middle, pull it through, turn it around and pull the other way. Ahh. That's simple enough, I feel dumb for not thinking of that. Also to clear things up, and this doesn't come as a big surprise but Bruce was right, you do have to pretty much hold the handle to do a flat split. When you put the handle the other way it does in fact stay without holding it but it does not allow the roller to roll and while it is possible to split something that way it doesn't pull through near as easy when the roller isn't rolling. That's not much of a concern for me as I wasn't really planning on doing many splits with it as the crank splitter works good enough for that. Quote www.mccabescustomleather.com
Members EricIsaiah Posted August 19, 2013 Members Report Posted August 19, 2013 Just snatched one of these up on eBay for $40 (new!). I'm pretty excited to see how well it works out. I've heard some good and bad things, but for $40, I thought it was worth a try. Sounds like I'll have to get the blade sharpened before I do too much work. Quote
Members WScott Posted August 19, 2013 Members Report Posted August 19, 2013 (edited) I have the Tandy version and it is better than my hand skiving for sure. I would love a crank splitter though. Must ask, what does "lap skiving" mean???? Edited August 19, 2013 by WScott Quote
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