We had a lengthy discussion in the shop on this subject, which - as is often the case with individuals intent on getting the last word on a topic - continued via text and secure message app over the course of the work week. In summary:
A standard 6" x 2-1/4" card scraper (5-7/8" x 2-1/2" for some European sourced scrapers such as the Bahco/Sandvik) is perfect for the job on a flattop. Scrapers only work well when they are very sharp, and as scraping binding usually involves cutting through lots and lots of glue, frequent resharpening will be necessary if the job is to proceed with any sort of dispatch. For much of the work, it is only necessary to put a rough edge on the scraper - one directly from a mill file, and a quick consolidation and turn of the rough burr...this process takes perhaps 60 seconds from start to finish, so 5-6 sharpening cycles consumes far less time than trying to continue the job with a dull tool. We usually don't bother stoning the edges until all of the excess adhesive has been removed, and it's time for a final light pass with a fine edge (although some makers will go directly to P220 at this stage, bypassing a final scrape).
One of the key advantages to the commonly available medium-weight (0.030"-0.035" thickness) card scraper is length - long enough to bridge the entire width of the side and bindings, which simplifies maintenance of a flat, true side, and dramatically speeds up the process of bringing things flush versus having to work each binding individually.
While working both bindings at the same time - a task impossible for scrapers much under about 5" - speeds up working the sides, that additional edge length also makes it easier and faster to bring the top and back bindings down with very little angular deviation from what is already introduced by the top and back radius. With one side of the edge safe'd, there is still considerable blade length left to ensure the scraper is skewed from the grain direction by 15 degrees or more.
Worth noting re: card and other un-jigged, straight-edged scrapers:
- Safe the same end of both edges when working the top and back...when dull (dust versus shaving, and hopping over versus cutting through glue), tape the other end and strip off the tape on the still sharp portion of the edges
- Skew the blade by at least 15 degrees from the top or back grain direction on softwoods and some hardwoods with varying surface hardness to avoid having the scraper 'hoop' from early-wood to early- wood (and creating a corrugated, torn-out surface)
- The scraper will tend to follow lumps and bumps of glue; frequent changes in skew angle - even a few degrees when working the sides - will allow these lumps and bumps to be efficiently leveled
- The area where wooden binding joins over the neck and tail blocks, at the corners of a Florentine cutaway, and the corner of the body/cutaway join on a Venetian cutaway can be a challenge due to the limited registration or inability to get much of a skew angle change...use a sharp, clean 8" or 10" mill bastard file with a tape-safe'd end to work these small areas once the bulk of the leveling is done elsewhere
- A 10" or 12" mill bastard and a scraper/saw jointer (we like the simpler Veritas 90 degree-only model without the 45 degree surface added in the later variant of the tool, but both are acceptable) makes quick work of stripping off the spent burrs on a card scraper (be careful - the ends of the scraper are very sharp). Consolidation and generation of a burr on the edge is useful but may not be needed for coarse work.
I should mention that we do have and use the Carruth scrapers in this shop for a number of jobs, and find them most suitable for working instruments with carved or pressed arched tops and backs. With an 8" CBN wheel and Veritas tool stands, sharpening can be done without heat build-up and with reasonable speed. But with all respect due Mr. Carruth and his brilliant scrapers, I would suggest that the humble card scraper is a tool better suited to the rough-and-tumble job of cutting through all that abrasive adhesive to get the initial level of bindings done in a reasonable amount of time.
_________________ For the times they are a changin'
- Bob Dylan
These users thanked the author Woodie G for the post: bcombs510 (Fri Jun 07, 2019 12:36 pm) |
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