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  #1  
Old 01-16-2022, 05:40 PM
shanejo shanejo is offline
 
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Default Advice on sharpening an auger blade

Hello,

I have been out fishing a lot lately and my auger is not nearly as effective as it was at the start of the year. I took the blades off this afternoon and am looking for some advice on how to best sharpen the blades. The blades have a bit of a curve to them so I am not sure if getting a stone would be the best bet. Should I order one of those pull through sharpeners for ice augers?

https://www.cabelas.ca/product/14082...harp-sharpener

Or should I just got at it with a file and steel to sharpen the blade?

Thanks!
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  #2  
Old 01-16-2022, 07:00 PM
calgarychef calgarychef is offline
 
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Having grown up with only hand augers….

An auger is a big drill bit, once you understand the geometry of a drill you should be able to sharpen any of them..including all of your shop drills. take a look at YouTube to learn to freehand a regular drill and you should be on your way. P.S. never tap a drill on or through the ice, it can bend the blade attachment points and once the angle is wrong it won’t cut as well.

I don’t think pull through sharpeners work well on any cutting tool as they don’t address the angle of the grind and don’t work out chips and gouges.
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  #3  
Old 01-16-2022, 07:23 PM
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fisher69 fisher69 is offline
 
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I bought the lazer strike master sharpener and it worked good on my swede bore auger blades, which are a bit rounded. Bought new blades last year but they needed a touch up this year. It worked well and it has a rest on one side that goes against the top of the blade and this angles the sharpener on the blade properly.

They state clearly though that it's only a temporary fix and the blades will need to be replaced, so I'll see how long it actually lasts, hopefully through this season as I'd rather not have to buy new blades every year

https://www.amazon.ca/dp/B0010G3C80/...ing=UTF8&psc=1

And here's a video showing how to use it
https://youtu.be/C3XiVfA0QXo

It can really depend on the brand and type of blades, and honestly unless you know what your doing don't try to manually sharpen it with anything else.

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  #4  
Old 01-16-2022, 07:29 PM
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EZM EZM is offline
 
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You could use a set of stones and take time and care to get the blades sharpened.

In my case, I bought a set of replacements, and when I swap them out, I send the dull set out to be sharpened. They do a quick and effective job on these for me and it's only a few bucks.

That way I always have a back up set on the ice.
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  #5  
Old 01-16-2022, 08:07 PM
OL_JR OL_JR is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by shanejo View Post
Hello,

I have been out fishing a lot lately and my auger is not nearly as effective as it was at the start of the year. I took the blades off this afternoon and am looking for some advice on how to best sharpen the blades. The blades have a bit of a curve to them so I am not sure if getting a stone would be the best bet. Should I order one of those pull through sharpeners for ice augers?

https://www.cabelas.ca/product/14082...harp-sharpener

Or should I just got at it with a file and steel to sharpen the blade?

Thanks!
What specific auger do you have? That would help as there are a bunch of different designs.

Last edited by OL_JR; 01-16-2022 at 08:13 PM.
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  #6  
Old 01-16-2022, 08:19 PM
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pikergolf pikergolf is online now
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by shanejo View Post
Hello,

I have been out fishing a lot lately and my auger is not nearly as effective as it was at the start of the year. I took the blades off this afternoon and am looking for some advice on how to best sharpen the blades. The blades have a bit of a curve to them so I am not sure if getting a stone would be the best bet. Should I order one of those pull through sharpeners for ice augers?

https://www.cabelas.ca/product/14082...harp-sharpener

Or should I just got at it with a file and steel to sharpen the blade?

Thanks!
Where do you live Shane?
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  #7  
Old 01-16-2022, 08:45 PM
calgarygringo calgarygringo is offline
 
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Just take them to a professional sharp shop and get them done right. Most only charge around 12 bucks per blade and make them better than new. Do them yourself and screw them up (angles) you may mess up a days fishing. At the cost of fuel these days professional is cheap.
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  #8  
Old 01-17-2022, 08:27 AM
graybeard graybeard is offline
 
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Originally Posted by calgarygringo View Post
Just take them to a professional sharp shop and get them done right. Most only charge around 12 bucks per blade and make them better than new. Do them yourself and screw them up (angles) you may mess up a days fishing. At the cost of fuel these days professional is cheap.
I agree 100% with you. This is one of those times that it pays to pay...

To get the blade sharp is easy. To get the correct angle is not easy.

Good luck,
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  #9  
Old 01-17-2022, 09:08 AM
Remps17 Remps17 is offline
 
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What I do with curved blades is use sandpaper. I glue different grits of sandpaper on a flat dowel and follow the angle of the blade. If really bad start with a 150-200. Work your way up to 600+. You will create a small burr on the backside. Lightly file it off on a stone. But what ever you do. DO NOT SHARPEN THE BACKSIDE.

Flat blades I use a stone.

If you blades are in bad shape. Send them in. This is more maintenance work. Like someone has said, pickup a backup pair and that way your out of commission.

I drilled close to 100 holes this past weekend. I will take my blades off and touch them up. Best to stay on top of them.

Good luck.
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  #10  
Old 01-23-2022, 12:31 PM
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Dean2 Dean2 is online now
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Remps17 View Post
What I do with curved blades is use sandpaper. I glue different grits of sandpaper on a flat dowel and follow the angle of the blade. If really bad start with a 150-200. Work your way up to 600+. You will create a small burr on the backside. Lightly file it off on a stone. But what ever you do. DO NOT SHARPEN THE BACKSIDE.

Flat blades I use a stone.

If you blades are in bad shape. Send them in. This is more maintenance work. Like someone has said, pickup a backup pair and that way your out of commission.

I drilled close to 100 holes this past weekend. I will take my blades off and touch them up. Best to stay on top of them.

Good luck.
This ^^^^^^^^. Spot on advice.

Between these two they covered it perfect.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Bushleague View Post
So long as you do the sharpening before the blade gets dull enough to lose its angles, retaining the factory angles is easy. I have an 8" Jiffy blade that I've done a minor touch up on probably once a season for over 15 years, just last year I got a new blade on sale... the new one cuts no faster than the old one. I have a Mora hand auger that I've had the same blades on since I was in high school, over 25 years later it still cuts great. Once again, its important to do your sharpening while the blades are still relatively sharp, and the job is relatively idiot proof.

The big thing is to figure out which angle is the most important, and to make sure to take the bulk of your metal off the other side. On a regular hand auger type blade you want to take the metal off of the upward facing edge (whilst retaining the original angle) and then just lightly take the burr off on the bottom, do not mess up that bottom angle on a hand auger. On a Jiffy style ripper blade its the opposite.

In neither situation, will any commercial product do you a whole lot of good. I just use a fine file and a sharpening stone with good success.
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  #11  
Old 01-20-2022, 09:25 AM
Bushleague Bushleague is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by graybeard View Post
I agree 100% with you. This is one of those times that it pays to pay...

To get the blade sharp is easy. To get the correct angle is not easy.

Good luck,
So long as you do the sharpening before the blade gets dull enough to lose its angles, retaining the factory angles is easy. I have an 8" Jiffy blade that I've done a minor touch up on probably once a season for over 15 years, just last year I got a new blade on sale... the new one cuts no faster than the old one. I have a Mora hand auger that I've had the same blades on since I was in high school, over 25 years later it still cuts great. Once again, its important to do your sharpening while the blades are still relatively sharp, and the job is relatively idiot proof.

The big thing is to figure out which angle is the most important, and to make sure to take the bulk of your metal off the other side. On a regular hand auger type blade you want to take the metal off of the upward facing edge (whilst retaining the original angle) and then just lightly take the burr off on the bottom, do not mess up that bottom angle on a hand auger. On a Jiffy style ripper blade its the opposite.

In neither situation, will any commercial product do you a whole lot of good. I just use a fine file and a sharpening stone with good success.
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Last edited by Bushleague; 01-20-2022 at 09:33 AM.
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  #12  
Old 01-17-2022, 08:29 PM
shanejo shanejo is offline
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by pikergolf View Post
Where do you live Shane?
I am in Edmonton, I just have a basic cabelas hand auger.

Thanks for all your thoughts!
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  #13  
Old 01-19-2022, 01:06 PM
sparkster sparkster is offline
 
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Is there any sort of ongoing maintenance tricks that keep the the sharp edge always instead of lettings them get dull over time and then getting them professionally sharpened.

I talked to this amazing arborist take down a massive huge tree with a little stihl chainsaw piece by piece. Being a chainsaw guy myself, i asked him how he did the hole tree without changing his blade once. He told me he has not taken a chain off his saws for years and keeps them razor sharp by giving them a quick file, sharpen during or after every job. I was amazed

Is there any sort of device we can follow the same principle. After each day, run a quick stone or sharpener over the blade? Interested in peoples thoughts. Because, I hate dull blades!
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  #14  
Old 01-19-2022, 04:31 PM
kevinhits kevinhits is offline
 
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As mentioned before, get them professionally done. I have 2 sets and switch them half way through the season. Once done for the winter, take both sets to Foothills sharpening in Okotoks and ready for next ice fishing season. Both sets cost to sharpen around $20. I spend more than that on gas before i get out of Calgary for one trip..LOL

Getting the wrong angle and your trip is ruined...
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  #15  
Old 01-19-2022, 05:39 PM
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Penner Penner is online now
 
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Do NOT sharpen them yourself. Leading Edge Sharpening based out of Mornville. She has drop boxes in Edmonton for drop off & pick-up. Only person I found whom was able to sharpen curved auger blades.
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