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  2. Crosscut saw - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crosscut_saw

    A crosscut saw (thwart saw) is any saw designed for cutting wood perpendicular to (across) the wood grain. Crosscut saws may be small or large, with small teeth close together for fine work like woodworking or large for coarse work like log bucking, and can be a hand tool or power tool. The cutting edge of each tooth is angled in an alternating ...

  3. Bucksaw - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bucksaw

    A bucksaw is a crosscut saw: it is designed to cut across the grain. The width of the blade is constant from the teeth to the back. It is meant to cut wood fibers that are under tension, and is thick so that it is more difficult to bend on the push stroke. It can be either a one or two-man saw. Coopers often use bucksaws in their work.

  4. Millers Falls Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millers_Falls_Company

    A complete list in miniature of Bowman's famous scroll saw designs, 1880. OCLC 41664680; Tool practice : a treatise on the proper use and care of tools, containing information and advice of use to the mechanic, instructive and an inspiration to the apprentice, 1911. OCLC 39395025; You and your company, 1952. OCLC 50944526; Hand Tools, 1999.

  5. List of timber framing tools - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_timber_framing_tools

    Tools include dividers, axes, chisel and mallet, beam cart, pit saw, trestles, and bisaigue. The men talking may be holding a story pole and rule (or walking cane). Shear legs are hoisting a timber. Below, the sticks on the log are winding sticks used to align the ends of a timber. Tools used in traditional timber framing date back thousands of ...

  6. Dragsaw - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dragsaw

    A dragsaw or drag saw is a large reciprocating saw using a long steel crosscut saw to buck logs to length. Prior to the popularization of the chainsaw during World War II, the dragsaw was a popular means of taking the hard work out of cutting wood. They would only work for a log on the ground. [1]

  7. Two-man saw - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Two-man_saw

    Two-man saws were known to the ancient Romans, but first became common in Europe in the mid-15th century. In America, crosscut saws were used as early as the mid-17th century, but felling saws only began to replace axes for felling trees in the late 19th century. [2] Some Japanese saws are used by two persons, although they are of a different ...

  8. Bow saw - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bow_saw

    A modern bow saw is a metal-framed crosscut saw in the shape of a bow with a coarse wide blade. This type of saw is also known as a Swede saw, bushman saw, Finn saw [1] or bucksaw. It is a rough tool that can be used for cross-cutting branches or firewood, up to a log diameter of half the blade length, limited by the height of the frame above ...

  9. Belknap Hardware and Manufacturing Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belknap_Hardware_and...

    A 1909 ad for the Belknap Hardware and Manufacturing Company. The Belknap Hardware and Manufacturing Company, also known as the Belknap Hardware Company or simply Belknap Hardware, was at one time a leading American manufacturer of hardware goods and a major wholesale competitor of retail sales companies Sears, Roebuck, and Company and Montgomery Ward.