Replacement Blades
The HP-6 Radius Spare Iron is profiled on both ends. The A2 hardened tool steel will perform admirably, and when one becomes dull, flip the iron around and you are back in business. read more
The HP-6 Replacement Rabbet Iron is A-2 tool steel, hardened to Rc 60-62 and is cryogenically tempered. read more
This is the replacement blade to the JS-1 Dozuki Back Saw. read more
The replacement blade for the CT-14 1-1/8" Foxtail Shoulder Plane is .250″ thick A2 tool steel iron (Rc 60- 62), bedded bevel up at 15° for an inclusive attack angle of 42°. The working width of the iron is approximately 1.125″, and is .008″... read more
Beginning with an annealed piece of A2 steel, the iron is milled to size, heat treated to Rockwell 60-62 and cryogenically tempered. This allows for extremely sharp edges that hold longer than traditionally processed blades. The iron is then lapped,... read more
Traditional low-angle smoothing plane irons are ground to 20° plus a 5° micro-bevel, and when seated in a 12° plane, the attack angle is 37°. That being, it may make sense for CT-11 owners to have an additional iron with an included angle of... read more
Beginning with an annealed piece of A2 steel the iron is milled to size, heat treated to Rockwell 60-62 and cryogenically tempered. This allows for extremely sharp edges that hold longer than traditional processes allow. The iron is then lapped,... read more
The coordinating iron for the CT-12 40º Bench Plane is a forty-degree pitched blade (bevel down) that is made of cryogenically tempered A2 tool steel (Rc 60-62) and has been lapped and sharpened. read more
These Replacement Irons are made from A-2 tool steel, cryogenically treated, hardened to Rc 60-62 and lapped to a mirror finish. They will keep a razor-sharp edge much longer than traditional tool steels. read more
The HP-6 Rabbet Sole features a precisely manufactured scoring cutter that precedes the approach of the iron. This scoring cutter makes it impossible to tear the corner of your rabbet cuts. It also makes it possible to cut across the grain rabbets... read more
