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Posted

FYI, I hate wearing gloves whilst working, but always now wear a glove on my left hand whilst using a silky (with my right). I've got more scars on my hands and wrists from a silky than absolutely any other tool i've ever used. 

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Posted
11 minutes ago, Retired Climber said:

FYI, I hate wearing gloves whilst working, but always now wear a glove on my left hand whilst using a silky (with my right). I've got more scars on my hands and wrists from a silky than absolutely any other tool i've ever used. 

Sounds like its a good job you retired!

  • Haha 4
Posted
23 minutes ago, Retired Climber said:

I was only ever playing at it. I don't think suggesting the use of a glove is bad advice though. 


It is if it gets him mistaken for Michael Jackson.

Posted

The Zubat Silky saw and scabbard are very well made. Can buy replacement blades. Just the job for what I want it for.

 

Thanks everyone for your input 🙂

Posted

Bought a couple of these Benman handsaws. €20 a piece, handle included, on par with my silky (new blade vs new blade) but a touch shorter. Only bad thing it there's no "click" retention on the scabbard, so not really a climbing saw, unless modified to stay out in the scabbard.

 

 

 

IMG_20221102_144316.thumb.jpg.5a1950746844e68f685406fd3712e147.jpgIMG_20221102_144501.thumb.jpg.a252470b5dad64d10a930d0b74c0fe98.jpg

 

Posted
56 minutes ago, [email protected] said:

The Zubat Silky saw and scabbard are very well made. Can buy replacement blades. Just the job for what I want it for.

 

Thanks everyone for your input 🙂

Truth be told you won't go far wrong with whatever Silky you use. I prefer the Natanoko as when I was an apprentice I spent an entire week at a bench vice with little blocks of metal doing nothing other than learning how to use a hacksaw properly, i.e perfectly straight level strokes, no rocking permitted!

 

Therefore the straight blade just feels more precise and I keep the Zubat for higher up stuff, but that's just me.

 

One word of warning though, and it's already been said but worth repeating, show the blade a huge amount of respect. You'll probably nick yourself at some point anyway, but if you're being careful you'll keep the consequences to a piece of gauze and a band aid, if not it'll be steri strip or even stitches very easily.

 

Enjoy your harvesting.

 

 

  • Like 1
Posted
41 minutes ago, coppice cutter said:

Truth be told you won't go far wrong with whatever Silky you use. I prefer the Natanoko as when I was an apprentice I spent an entire week at a bench vice with little blocks of metal doing nothing other than learning how to use a hacksaw properly, i.e perfectly straight level strokes, no rocking permitted!

 

Therefore the straight blade just feels more precise and I keep the Zubat for higher up stuff, but that's just me.

 

One word of warning though, and it's already been said but worth repeating, show the blade a huge amount of respect. You'll probably nick yourself at some point anyway, but if you're being careful you'll keep the consequences to a piece of gauze and a band aid, if not it'll be steri strip or even stitches very easily.

 

Enjoy your harvesting.

 

 

 

100%. We don't think twice about touching a chain (if the saw's off), running a thumb over the cutting edge, and so on. Why? Cos chainsaw chains are really not all that sharp. A moving chain is a different matter. But a silky blade is a different beast, different geometry. And a silky is always in motion. Unless it's held in a vice, it's in motion, even the the motion is slight, but slight is more than enough to wreck flesh. Each tooth is a little knife, in perpendicular and back n' forth motion.

 

 

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