What’s the Best Way to Test Chisel Sharpness?

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Asked By CuriousCrafter42 On

I know that a chef's knife should easily cut through a tomato to be considered sharp, but what about chisels? I recently bought some new chisels to practice my skills and techniques, but I want to make sure that I'm sharpening them properly. What's a good benchmark for how sharp they should be? I'm pretty familiar with whetstones from my experience with Japanese knives, so I'd love some insight into how sharp I should get my chisels. Thanks for the advice!

3 Answers

Answered By WoodworkWizard99 On

Many folks say 'shaving sharp' is the goal, but I think that’s misleading. A dull edge can still shave. A better test is to try paring nice shavings off the end grain of pine—that’ll really show you if your chisel is sharp enough for actual tasks.

ShapeShifter88 -

Absolutely! If your chisel can pare pine end grain without crushing it, you're definitely sharp. I also find that looking for clean lines when paring hard maple end grain is a great way to check the edge.

Answered By PaperCutPro On

If your chisel can effortlessly slice into a piece of paper straight on, it’s a good indicator of sharpness. Many can slice paper, but cutting straight without dragging is key to being sharp. This is my go-to test when I finish sharpening to double-check my edge.

QuickFixPro -

Exactly! Over time, you’ll develop a knack for knowing how smoothly it cuts, beyond just whether it can or can’t.

Answered By ChiselChaser On

It really depends on what you're doing. For general bench work, I sharpen just enough to barely shave hair off my arm. But for dedicated paring tasks, I go for the sharpest edge I can manage. Don’t forget about using different grind angles for various jobs—keeping multiple chisels is a great strategy!

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