good axe?

   / good axe? #1  

poorboy

Silver Member
Joined
Jul 12, 2000
Messages
191
Location
Eastern Kentucky
I seem to have misplaced my axe and am in need of a replacement. Can anyone recommend a brand of a good double bit axe that can be actually sharpened?

Patrick
 
   / good axe? #2  
Poorboy,
Gransfors makes what some say are the best axes in the world. Here is their site
http://www.gransfors.com/htm_eng/index.html

I have never seen one in person. they are pricey. Do a search in Google to find a retailer. There was a thread on the gardenweb a while back and these got rave reviews from the loggers. Me - I love my Stihl.

Phil
 
   / good axe? #3  
   / good axe? #4  
i have used the gransfors-bruks hunters axe and will tell you this is some piece of steel, sharp enough to shave with and will break down a large animal without any difficulty, i have even chopped wood with the axe, it is still shaving sharp. i would buy one of their axes anytime, it is expensive, but works well by people who know how to build an ax.

http://www.skywoodscanoes.com/Skywoods Web page/gransfors american felling.htm

alex
 
   / good axe?
  • Thread Starter
#5  
Those are absolutley some beautiful axes. I would love to have one of these axes someday. When I can afford to loose one of the beautys I will definitly invest. I would hate to clear fence rows and keep sinking the heads into the dirt. But boy I bet they would resharpen quickly.

Just added that American felling axe to the top 5 wish list. The semilocal farm store has a kelly perfect axe that may suffice for now. Anyone any experience with them? Thanks for the Lenard list, the catalogue is on the way to my sister in-law.

Thanks for the great info you guys have so much info.
Patrick
 
   / good axe? #6  
poorboy,
I have a Stanley double bladed ax that has served me well. I also have a cheaper [no name] ax and you can tell is softer metal - - it sharpens & dulls quickly. The Stanley, however, holds a sharp edge much better. I've had the Stanley for 20+ years & have been through 2-3 handles [due to operator error, my handles 'wear out'].

I use a splitting maul for splitting most firewood, but will also use the Stanley for smaller pieces.

Good luck.
 

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