The Hidden Cost of "Warm" Steel: Is Your Bench Grinder Killing Your Tool Life?
Hey everyone,
Joined the community about 2 weeks ago and wanted to talk shop about something that bugs me every time I see it in the field: the standard garage bench grinder.
I run Sharp Artisan Knife and Tool Sharpening out of west Georgia. As a service-based skilled trade, I spend all day looking at edge geometry and metallurgy. One massive mistake I see a lot of pros make when maintaining their own gear, whether it’s high-end pruning shears, wood chisels, or culinary steel is using dry, high-speed grinding wheels.
If your blade sparks like a 4th of July sparkler and turns even slightly blue or straw-colored at the edge, the temper is shot. That high heat completely alters the carbon structure of the steel, making it brittle. It might feel sharp for an hour, but it will chip or go dull twice as fast on the next job.
In my studio, I run strictly slow-speed, water-cooled machinery to keep the steel completely cold. It takes a bit more patience, but the near mirror-polished edge holds up to serious commercial abuse.
Curious how the rest of you handle tool maintenance in your shops? Are you guys doing quick touch-ups on a standard dry wheel, outsourcing to a specialist, or just running blades until they die and replacing them?
Drop your setups below!