Boiling Stones

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I’ve been enjoying my new books. Lost Art Press recently released the two book set “The Woodworker: The Charles H. Hayward Years“, a release that I’ve been eagerly awaiting ever since it was announced month (years?) ago. It’s an absolutely fantastic curated collection of woodworker and author Hayward’s articles from his years as editor of the English The Woodworker magazine from 1939 to 1967. If ever “Lost Art Press” lived up to its its name (by, you know, pressing lost art), its here. Hayward’s career spanned the transition from hand work to the modern power tool age, a period when so much fundamental woodworking knowledge went from being common to almost forgotten. At 888 pages, it is a massive collection. But Lost Art Press has organized it by type and topic (and done an amazing job at re-setting the type and reproducing the illustrations) to where it is an engaging and very accessible read. As I go through it, every page seems to reveal a new gem, and authoritatively answers the kinds of questions that pop up on today’s woodworking forums with regularity, ones that are often answered only hesitatingly and incompletely, by the well meaning, but ill-informed.

In a recent session going through the book, I came across a little article about cleaning oil stones. I hadn’t thought to consider they even needed cleaning – I’d thought I would just keep them oiled up in use, and wipe the slurry off when done. But as my current set of Arkansas stones have been feeling “gummy” lately, and not cutting quite like they did when new, this piece caught my attention. Hayward says to either “… boil it in a strong solution of water and washing soda…” for a couple of hours, or, if you’re in a hurry, cook it with a bare gas jet or blowlamp until the oil and grease (and embedded particles) are cooked out. The latter has the caveat that any uneven heating might cause the stones to crack. That seemed cool, but I wasn’t ready to risk it.

So, I decided to boil mine, with a little dish soap and water. So far so good. Thanks Mr Hayward.

Follow up: Night and day. The stones are cutting fantastically. After I boiled them for about 2 hours (seeing a big oil slick form on the top of the water), I dried them, then applied some WD-40, went over them briskly with a wire brush, and put them back to work.

SOURCE: DCW Woodworks – Read entire story here.

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