Members jcuk Posted September 3, 2020 Members Report Posted September 3, 2020 4 hours ago, Frodo said: ..Altho i agree that quality tools from yesteryear should be, And i AM pretty certain they ARE handed down and used by the next generation. I see no evidence that this does not occur I see posts where what not being taken into account is the fact that their ae more people in the world today than yeasteyear and that said, their are more leather workers . their is not enough old tools from yesteryear to supply all the workers of todays society. So we are now back to the beginning of the conversation and talking about making an awl from steel and what steel should be used and what method used to shape the steel.. The below is just my opinion and i have no science to back it up, It is what the ""Old Man said" 2 kinds of steel, high carbon and low carbon you want to use a high carbon steel, heating process , you want to heat [anneal] high carbon steel then let it cool, you do not want to quinch it toss it in a box of sand, cover it with the sand. this will hold some of the heat and let it cool slowly, / evenly, Handles. The Japanese laugh at Americans. They say we spend our time and effort on the handle but neglect the blade, They spend there time on the blade and neglect the handle . I think they are a tad bit more enlightened as to what deserves the attention Agreed to maybe there are more leatherworkers, so maybe not enough old tools to go around its just why can't we make these things closer to home keep our work force employed and i arm not just talking about leather tools either, we all got caught with our pants downs where PPE was concerned, it has to give everybody a kick up the rear end that we need to start manufacture more things closer to home again and not rely on others doing it for us. Agreed post has been somewhat highjacked, my awl blades and hafts got from Abbey England nothing fancy about blades or haft tend to abuse the haft so would not pay a high price for a exotic wood haft had them 20+ years still going strong maybe a little shorter now. JCUK Quote
CFM Frodo Posted September 3, 2020 CFM Report Posted September 3, 2020 23 minutes ago, jcuk said: Agreed to maybe there are more leatherworkers, so maybe not enough old tools to go around its just why can't we make these things closer to home keep our work force employed and i arm not just talking about leather tools either, we all got caught with our pants downs where PPE was concerned, it has to give everybody a kick up the rear end that we need to start manufacture more things closer to home again and not rely on others doing it for us. Agreed post has been somewhat highjacked, my awl blades and hafts got from Abbey England nothing fancy about blades or haft tend to abuse the haft so would not pay a high price for a exotic wood haft had them 20+ years still going strong maybe a little shorter now. JCUK why can't we make these things closer to home keep our work force employed and i arm not just talking about leather tools either Brother You are preaching to the Choir, I would rather buy from local boys than a chi chi shop. BUT With all due respect to people who make stuff. An AWL, IN MY HUMBLE OPINION is not worth 40, 50 USD It just is not worth it. Quote Singer 66, Chi Chi Patcher, Rex 26-188, singer 29k62 , 2-needles D.C.F.M
Members jcuk Posted September 4, 2020 Members Report Posted September 4, 2020 Nope most i have paid for an awl is around a tenner. Quote
Members jcuk Posted September 4, 2020 Members Report Posted September 4, 2020 (edited) On 9/2/2020 at 4:23 AM, Spyros said: All valid concerns - as is my concern of how friggin greedy can a non-Chinese company be, trying to sell me a bunch of laminated offcuts cut by a C&C as a traditional saddlers clam for USD$200. I'm not prepared to support anyone blindly just because of country of origin, they need to convince me first Nor would i, never seen them cost much even over here, that's English clams have seen some rather expensive French clams. Pretty sure you could make your own. https://www.abbeyengland.com/saddlers-clams-best-7357.html £64..24 All the best JCUK Edited September 4, 2020 by jcuk Quote
Members jhrleather Posted September 4, 2020 Members Report Posted September 4, 2020 As a professional wood carver and an amateur leather worker I own a Tormek machine and can say it works well for sharpening awl blades. For awl blades I use mostly the stropping wheel. Quote
Members chrisash Posted September 4, 2020 Members Report Posted September 4, 2020 The reason you cannot make tham in your own country is the cost of labour and your government You compare the cost of living between countries where as say in the UK the minimum wage per hour you must pay someoneis about £8.50 and the employer pays about 13% more to the government on top of this wage. In the Far East the hourly rate to live on a probably under £1 per hour, but at the same time housing and food are also that much cheaper When I operated on the North Sea and African Oil Barges in the 1970's the Americans got paid nearly double what a UK person got doing the same job Therefore the items with lots of manual imput are far cheaper to produce than America or Europe can manage Also the Far East believe far more on mass production in both quality and lesser quality items than the first world will not take the gamble on and pay little of the profit to the government so have far more money to invest in the most modern machenery The Buy made in the USA can be good and at the same time bad, good in that a percentage of US businesses make great products using high tech skills and equipment, whilst at the same time helps support the near dead companies who never invest and make things like the did 20-50 years ago and at the same time making them so cheap no modern facility can compete which is the future The world postage agreement is also the killer letting the Far East countries like China post goods around the world using the postal service with a silly low price to posters and free delivery to the states and europe meaning we are flooded with free postage items from China and Honk Kong plus others. we sellers ppay the full price for postage in our own countries whilst they pay next to nothing great idea Quote Mi omputer is ot ood at speeling , it's not me
Members paloma Posted September 4, 2020 Members Report Posted September 4, 2020 (edited) 27 minutes ago, chrisash said: The reason you cannot make tham in your own country is the cost of labour and your government You compare the cost of living between countries where as say in the UK the minimum wage per hour you must pay someoneis about £8.50 and the employer pays about 13% more to the government on top of this wage. In the Far East the hourly rate to live on a probably under £1 per hour, but at the same time housing and food are also that much cheaper When I operated on the North Sea and African Oil Barges in the 1970's the Americans got paid nearly double what a UK person got doing the same job Therefore the items with lots of manual imput are far cheaper to produce than America or Europe can manage Also the Far East believe far more on mass production in both quality and lesser quality items than the first world will not take the gamble on and pay little of the profit to the government so have far more money to invest in the most modern machenery The Buy made in the USA can be good and at the same time bad, good in that a percentage of US businesses make great products using high tech skills and equipment, whilst at the same time helps support the near dead companies who never invest and make things like the did 20-50 years ago and at the same time making them so cheap no modern facility can compete which is the future The world postage agreement is also the killer letting the Far East countries like China post goods around the world using the postal service with a silly low price to posters and free delivery to the states and europe meaning we are flooded with free postage items from China and Honk Kong plus others. we sellers ppay the full price for postage in our own countries whilst they pay next to nothing great idea yes yes yes it's all true ! Edited September 4, 2020 by paloma Quote time does not respect what is done without it https://tradisign.blogspot.com https://www.instagram.com/tradisign/
Members jcuk Posted September 4, 2020 Members Report Posted September 4, 2020 2 hours ago, chrisash said: The reason you cannot make tham in your own country is the cost of labour and your government You compare the cost of living between countries where as say in the UK the minimum wage per hour you must pay someoneis about £8.50 and the employer pays about 13% more to the government on top of this wage. In the Far East the hourly rate to live on a probably under £1 per hour, but at the same time housing and food are also that much cheaper When I operated on the North Sea and African Oil Barges in the 1970's the Americans got paid nearly double what a UK person got doing the same job Therefore the items with lots of manual imput are far cheaper to produce than America or Europe can manage Also the Far East believe far more on mass production in both quality and lesser quality items than the first world will not take the gamble on and pay little of the profit to the government so have far more money to invest in the most modern machenery The Buy made in the USA can be good and at the same time bad, good in that a percentage of US businesses make great products using high tech skills and equipment, whilst at the same time helps support the near dead companies who never invest and make things like the did 20-50 years ago and at the same time making them so cheap no modern facility can compete which is the future The world postage agreement is also the killer letting the Far East countries like China post goods around the world using the postal service with a silly low price to posters and free delivery to the states and europe meaning we are flooded with free postage items from China and Honk Kong plus others. we sellers ppay the full price for postage in our own countries whilst they pay next to nothing great idea Yes agree too. One thing though Dr Martins boots shut down their operation in Northampton laying pretty much all of their work force i think, relocating the the manufacturing to China to cut costs and not passing any of the saving onto the customers - lost me as a customer there and then and as with Hunter wellies formally handmade in Scotland which too were now getting made in China the quality dipped. There are was a rush to get any old D M s that were made in the UK why because better made. So you know what happened the people at Dr Martin must have had had the bright idea to reopen some of there operation back in Northampton on a small scale calling them the originals yes they were more expensive but had no trouble getting plenty of customers so much so had to expand the operation back in the UK and up until the you know what came upon the world, they were still hiring people because of demand, people were choosing the original's over the Chinese made ones and yes i did get a pair myself. I am not saying this could reverse all this but if the product is good enough in the first place, loyal people will support you that's why i like what Vergez Blanchand, Osborne and now George Barnsley are trying to do despite cheaper imports and yes i know its not all cheap and badly made. JCUK Quote
CFM chuck123wapati Posted September 4, 2020 CFM Report Posted September 4, 2020 Read the Paris climate accord you will understand why your manufacturing is in China. And why your politicians are rich. They gave away your prosperity for their own. China gets a free pass on pollution for 20 years. Trade deals by your politicians made that happen. Setting up world trade dominance by china utilizing their socialist slave labor. Our president has brought all this to the light for everyone to see. One example Canada paid 50% lower prices for drugs than the US at least that was the case until out president got a fair trade deal its a fact look it up and its why China wants him out!! Quote Worked in a prison for 30 years if I aint shiny every time I comment its no big deal, I just don't wave pompoms. “I won’t be wronged, I won’t be insulted, and I won’t be laid a hand on. I don’t do these things to other people, and I require the same from them.” THE DUKE!
Members DJole Posted September 4, 2020 Members Report Posted September 4, 2020 4 hours ago, jcuk said: One thing though Dr Martins boots shut down their operation in Northampton laying pretty much all of their work force i think, relocating the the manufacturing to China to cut costs and not passing any of the saving onto the customers - lost me as a customer there and then and as with Hunter wellies formally handmade in Scotland which too were now getting made in China the quality dipped. There are was a rush to get any old D M s that were made in the UK why because better made. So you know what happened the people at Dr Martin must have had had the bright idea to reopen some of there operation back in Northampton on a small scale calling them the originals yes they were more expensive but had no trouble getting plenty of customers so much so had to expand the operation back in the UK and up until the you know what came upon the world, they were still hiring people because of demand, people were choosing the original's over the Chinese made ones and yes i did get a pair myself. I am not saying this could reverse all this but if the product is good enough in the first place, loyal people will support you that's why i like what Vergez Blanchand, Osborne and now George Barnsley are trying to do despite cheaper imports and yes i know its not all cheap and badly made. I love the comfort of Docs... but yes, the Chinese-made ones are garbage. Of the four pairs of Docs I own, two of them are Chinese made, and the leather is garbage -- the heel leather has actually ripped on one pair (horizontally just above the heel). I, being a leather guy, patched it up so I could still wear them. The two non-Chinese ones have fared MUCH better. One pair I have is about 16 years old, and pretty beat up, but the leather is still strong. The other pair is a discontinued low boot I snagged from a thrift store. I don't know how old they are, but hey are still going strong, although the cloth interior is ripping from wear, right where it meets the heel. Oh, yeah...we were talking about awls, that's right! I wish that somebody from Tandy, way back in the late 80s or so when I purchased my first awl there, had explained about polishing and sharpening. Of course, I didn't ask, because I didn't know, and there was no internet yet. I should do that, though. Looking at it just now, I had no idea it was so broad in width! The Osborne awl next to it is much narrower. Quote \D. Jole \ --> <http://djole.altervista.org/djole/Publications/Leather/Lindex.htm>
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