• Hi all and welcome to TheWoodHaven2 brought into the 21st Century, kicking and screaming! We all have Alasdair to thank for the vast bulk of the heavy lifting to get us here, no more so than me because he's taken away a huge burden of responsibility from my shoulders and brought us to this new shiny home, with all your previous content (hopefully) still intact! Please peruse and feed back. There is still plenty to do, like changing the colour scheme, adding the banner graphic, tweaking the odd setting here and there so I have added a new thread in the 'Technical Issues, Bugs and Feature Requests' forum for you to add any issues you find, any missing settings or just anything you'd like to see added/removed from the feature set that Xenforo offers. We will get to everything over the coming weeks so please be patient, but add anything at all to the thread I mention above and we promise to get to them over the next few days/weeks/months. In the meantime, please enjoy!

If there was one hand tool which you would like to see made again.

Andy Kev.

Nordic Pine
Joined
Jan 4, 2021
Messages
681
Reaction score
36
The only tool I have for which I'm thinking of getting a spare copy as a sort of insurance policy is my footprint eggbeater drill. This is because the one I have is so reliable and never lets me down but also because it comes with a chuck key which of course means that you can get the jaws properly tight. If it were made again to the old standards, I'd be prepared to pay a fair modern price for it.

Are there any other tools which you'd nominate for the same treatment?
 
"Made again to the old standards" is quite a high bar.
If we confine ourselves to just woodworking hand tools, quite a few have been revived by small scale makers, working to equal what was offered to professionals from the 18th to the mid 20th century. But in the mass market, it's mostly tool-shaped objects made to a price point.🙁

Thinking about small scale maker, for good wooden planes, I'd suggest Phil Edwards, Matt Bickford or Stavros Gackos, plus quite a few not making full-time.

For saws, there's Shane Skelton or Thomas Flinn on a more commercial scale.

For chisels, gouges and carving tools, there's Ray Iles and Henry Taylor.

But for all of them, their biggest challenge must be that there are so many good old tools, still being sold for very little. How many woodworkers will buy a new moulding plane for over £200 when they can get an old one for less than the price of a pint?

I can't think of anyone making hand drills and agree that the Footprint one (with the blue paint) is an excellent quality user.
I thought I remembered quite an expensive equivalent at Dieter Schmid, but can't find it now. Workshop Heaven have a choice of braces for £73 or £115 but are they really any better than the many old ones?
 
........Workshop Heaven have a choice of braces for £73 or £115 but are they really any better than the many old ones?

Yes......for what their actual purpose is: a status symbol.

An egg-beater with a chuck key? I've never come across such a beast. I can feel a photo arriving in 3...........2...........
 
Let me reach for my rose tinted glasses. I would like a quality egg beater, but...
In my experience the ones made in the good old days were not always robust. I inherited my grandad's egg beater which I used occasionally. One day I came to use it and disaster struck the chuck fell apart and springs shot everywhere (never to be found).
The likes of Veritas and Lie Nielsen are also updating some tools. A recent example good quality saw sets which have been absent the last 30 years.
As an apprentice in the late seventies and early eighties I had to buy crap on the whole. I did manage to find some quality tools which I still own.
I have been buying quality tools the last 15 years some I think better than they ever were.
 
I can feel a photo arriving in 3...........2...........
 
I have often thought the "Goscut" is underrated and no longer available*.
Always in my tool box wherever I'm working.

*Depends who you know, please form an orderly queue ;) 😇

Cheers, Andy

 
Anyone who wants an egg beater ( non chuck key type) or a brace.
I have several looking for a good home for the price of postage and a small donation to my charity of choice.
 
I have often thought the "Goscut" is underrated and no longer available*.
Always in my tool box wherever I'm working.

*Depends who you know, please form an orderly queue ;) 😇

Cheers, Andy

Seconded. Who needs a motor, battery and charger? People with weak wrists and a love of complexity, that's who. I bought mine in Bristol Design, before Andy started talking up the prices! 😏
 
I have often thought the "Goscut" is underrated and no longer available*.
Always in my tool box wherever I'm working.

*Depends who you know, please form an orderly queue ;) 😇

Cheers, Andy

I’ve got one of those somewhere
 
Stanley No1 Odd Jobs.
Even of it was a jack of all trades, master of done, they look so cool with an excellent name too.
 
Stanley No1 Odd Jobs.
Even of it was a jack of all trades, master of done, they look so cool with an excellent name too.
Axminster used to sell a modern reproduction of that. There might be some still around somewhere?

Garret Wade have them in the US

 
Last edited:
I lament the demise of the Stanley Yankee Spiral Ratchet screwdriver.
Paul Chapman who some may remember was a big devotee of the Spiral Ratchet screwdriver and had a sizeable collection. My dad told me years ago that they were banned in the Fleet Air Arm as they had a nasty tendency to slip under pressure and so there was a very good chance of the bit puncturing a thin duralumin aircraft skin - Rob
 
My Footprint drill is simpler than the one you linked to: it is a conventional eggbeater design i.e. with no handle coming out at an angle.

If I remember aright, Bridge City once did an eggbeater and it occasionally crops up second hand at high prices. I'm sure it's highly functional but it looks to be a bit in the "work of art" category but importantly it has no chuck. Here you go: https://www.jimbodetools.com/produc...original-presentation-box-115975-as-of-apr-20


If another does get made, my best guess is that Veritas would be the ones to do it.
 
People with weak wrists ……..! 😏
I’m not so sure about that. The torque on my Milwaukee drill is huge and when the drill bogs down you need a strong wrist if you don’t want the back of your hand being slammed into the sharp edge on a door jamb.

DAMHIKT ;)
 
I had a lovely double-pinion drill, I think it was made by Record. Green livery, Jacobs chuck .Excellent build quality. I won it for a letter I wrote to Woodworker magazine, I think when Zachary Taylor was editor. It was great for tiny holes and well-controlled countersinking.
Alas it was among all the stuff that got stolen :(
S
 
I am not even slightly interested in going back to hand tools. I've just done 38 off 100mm wide strips of 12mm MR MDF from 2400mm boards. For making panels. Cut to width and length with a Mafell tracksaw, lengths cut with short track. Electric pin gun and Festool mini drill it's three times quicker than hand tools. Each to their own. I use Veritas tenon saws, LN chisels and mostly Clifton planes when forced to do jobs by hand. They will see me out and there is no hand tool I will miss beyond what I've got.
 
Um...... Which tools have been discontinued? Ok the spiral ratchet screwdriver (or "pump" as they were referred to), I still have mine, every yacht Joiner back then had one but as mentioned above some Foreman banned their use. Mine still hangs forlornly waiting to be employed once more.
Compass planes? are they still available new? lovely things when you need them. Proper brass backed tenon saws? ok still available but what about bog standard Spear and Jacksons? I have a newish rip off version.... its okish but the handle is poor. The old hand drills still have their place but again mine is just taking up space....? Can you buy cutting gauges? I never have, I've only ever converted a standard one using a ground jigsaw blade. OK I know...... the ovolo shave! I have one somewhere...........
 
I don't know of anyone still making compass planes.

I'm pretty sure that the Spear and Jackson brand is just a name, with production all done in Asia, so I wouldn't expect a current S&J saw to have any resemblance to an old one.

Joseph Marples still make cutting gauges, apparently in the UK

 
As a kid I was graciously given a drill just like the one on the right in Dukes photo along with a yankee screwdriver, by my dad
Upon reflection the old bugger was just offloading his rubbish as the screwdriver just jammed at the top of each recoil and the drills chuck/pinion/shaft kept dropping from the handle.
I had probably binned them both before my voice broke
Still have my Mitutoyu micrometers,depth guage and vernier calipers from my apprenticeship.
The company got a discount and lent us the money and it took nearly a year to pay it back on teenagers wages.
 
Last edited:
Before I was born, my dad worked for a company that did a lot of bar refurbishment work. One day, he was installing a newly re-uphstolstered bench seat, screwing up from below, using a pump-action Yankee screwdriver.

It slipped and hit him in the eye. They did discuss having to remove his eyeball, but somehow he recovered.

As a kid, I was always fascinated by the action of the tool, the double spiral and how you could make it go one way or the other. But it was the one tool he would never let us use.

S
 
Definitely agree with the Compass plane suggestion.

Also Yankee screwdrivers - they are brilliant for working with slot screws (though you can get something very similar new)

My suggestion would be spoon bits. The ones that fit yankee screwdrivers are great for creating pilot holes. Larger ones that work with braces or have a socket for a cross piece handle and great fun to use and surprisingly effective.
 
Just for some contrast..... Tools that you are happy to have been discontinued?

The adjustable brace bit? Awful things.
At least I don't think they are still made.
 
I don't know of anyone still making compass planes.

I'm pretty sure that the Spear and Jackson brand is just a name, with production all done in Asia, so I wouldn't expect a current S&J saw to have any resemblance to an old one.

Joseph Marples still make cutting gauges, apparently in the UK

I have half a memory of the German firm Kunz making compass planes but it looks like they may have stopped. Some dealers still stock replacement blades but this is the only one I found selling the plane:


Maybe it's one of the last available as new.
 
€392! I wonder how many they sell at that price.

But your mention of Kunz reminded me of another company that I remember as making some uncommon planes - Anant. And they also list a compass plane:

circular-plane-a113.jpg



(They also make a copy of the Stanley 45.)
 
Just for some contrast..... Tools that you are happy to have been discontinued?

The adjustable brace bit? Awful things.
At least I don't think they are still made.
Sorry to disappoint but they seem to still be made. This eBay search shows plenty of unused old stock but also some 'brand new' presumably from China for under £13 each:


Axminster have a much more expensive TCT variant that might be aimed at volume production use:


In my limited experience, with old ones, in a brace not a power drill, on a decent bit of wood (not splintery spruce) an expansive bit can work perfectly well.
 
Last edited:
Sorry to disappoint but they seem to still be made. This eBay search shows plenty of unused old stock but also some 'brand new' presumably from China for under £13 each:


Axminster have a much more expensive TCT variant that might be aimed at volume production use:


In my limited experience, with old ones, in a brace not a power drill, on a decent bit of wood (not splintery spruce) an expansive bit can work perfectly well.
You've done better than me, although I must say I haven't tried one for years maybe I'll dig it out and sharpen it up.
 
Definitely agree with the Compass plane suggestion.

Also Yankee screwdrivers - they are brilliant for working with slot screws (though you can get something very similar new)

My suggestion would be spoon bits. The ones that fit yankee screwdrivers are great for creating pilot holes. Larger ones that work with braces or have a socket for a cross piece handle and great fun to use and surprisingly effective.
Yankee screwdrivers work surprisingly well with Pozi/Philips screws, if you can find the bits, or Hex drive bits.

Bod1
 
Yankee screwdrivers work surprisingly well with Pozi/Philips screws, if you can find the bits, or Hex drive bits.

Bod1
Think they work even better with torx bits/screws. Use them all the time.
 
Do you get bits made for the Yankee or do you use an adapter
I just bought a new, compatible no 2 Pozi bit on eBay for mine, as being the most useful size.

IMG_20260321_164129417.jpg

It's actually a Millers Falls, which might be readable here

IMG_20260321_164204831.jpg

Nice to have but I admit it lives at the back of a drawer, while my battery driver is closer to hand, under the bench. 😏
 
Back
Top