Plan B
I was looking at some of the offerings on ebay,and there are some nice tools being sold reasonable there.
Do you think that the slight convex or concave or straight bladed matter much?
Do you feel that having a steeper bevel than most makes a difference?
and if you don't mind too many questions, do you always use it bevel up or bevel down or both?
willie
willie, I've only used one drawknife my whole life. It's straight bladed as far as the edge is concerned, but slightly curved on the flat. I have tried 2 other draw knives belonging to other people -- both were modern flat (all the way) and had wider blades, uncomfortable handles, were shorter, and did a really poor job of removing wood. I'm not a drawknife expert, I just lucked into a really good one. Not saying others or other types aren't good, too, but I bet older ones are likely better made for the purpose than newer ones because people had more experience using and making them when they were more commonly used in the trades.
I always use mine bevel down. It would never work the other way. It would just dig in. The bevel is at the right angle so by angling your grip just slightly you can take off either a big gob of wood or a paper thin shaving. It's like an instrument -- you get so you can play it by feel -- the grain tells you by feel too, and you stop when it reverses sometimes, and slice back the other way. Hard to describe how a good tool feels.