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Jiffy 8" Hand Auger Blade Sharpening

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volume4130:
Last year I picked up an 8" Jiffy hand auger and was wondering if anyone had any experience sharpening the blades.  It's a chipper style blade, with different sections, but the section closest to the center point is longer than the others, so the pull sharpener they make would not work.  I supposed I could file each section, but I'd be concerned about keeping the angles correct.

This season I used it on a Clam Plate with my drill, and it worked fine, but if you look on the website description, it says "Not compatible with powered drills", so I guess I'm wondering if I'm putting extra strain on the drill, don't want to burn it out.

Does anyone know if the screw hole patterns line up with a different style/brand of blade and could work with this auger?  Don't really want to buy new blades all the time, especially I've been able to just touch up other brands a few times throughout the season.

Wasn't an expensive auger, so if I had to replace it, I could find something more suited to use with the clam plate.  Here's the link to the blades for reference:

https://jiffyonice.com/products/hand-auger-blades?variant=40795280375851

Thanks in advance!

hardwater diehard:
You might be better served with a Mora/shaver/flat bladed auger . Jiffy seems to be an odd duck Edsel. Lots of knock off composite augers on Amazon at reasonable prices . Mora blades can be found almost anywhere ...and can be sharpened with a minimal skill set.

thomasthepikehunter:
The reason it says that is a "power auger" typically has a 7/8" output shaft. Hand augers are typically smaller than that. They do not physically fit without an adapter. Obviously an auger that is meant to be turned by hand does not drill hard, or at least it would be a garbage hand auger if it did. It should be just fine on a drill, you would know if it wasn't.

I don't know about sharpening jiffy blades. I would think the best way would be some sandpaper, a flat surface, and sharpen it on the edge of a table.

I'm a big Mora auger fan. They are about a pound lighter than Lazer augers.

Lazer augers are a little heavier, but supposedly cut faster than a Mora. I've spent my whole season this year with a Lazer hand auger, and it cuts great. I'm not convinced it's faster than a Mora though.

badger132:
I think that if you are using a Clam plate, if it is the one that has gear reduction, that is as good as an auger for torque, and you should be fine. I have not tried blades like that, but for all others (mora, Lazer, even Nils) I have had good luck using a knife sharpener of different types, and sharpening only the side away from the ice. I have used hand stones, paper wheels with abrasive, and even a worksharp, and they all worked. I would try that and see what the results are. Just match the angle, then tilt the blade slightly up so you are creating a secondary bevel. and sharpen enough to put a new edge on. I use Jewelers loupes to see the edge and verify what I am doing, but your eyes might be better than mine. These are chipper style blades, I believe, and are not as fussy as shaver type blades.

Ronnie D:
Bought a couple of sets of jiffy blades  & they didn't  line up right. Could have been changes in production  or ownership  but it's  a crapshoot.
I usually send mine out every  other year to these guys for sharpening  & haven't  been disappointed
Robinson's Saw Service, Inc. https://g.co/kgs/q2xcb4V

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