In Shop Blog

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This morning as I walked out my front door, my hair got caught in some low-hanging branches from the cherry tree that shades the front porch. That was enough to finally spur me into action and get out the pruning shears. Problem was, the branches that needed cutting back were too thick for my pruning shears to handle, and I don’t have the proper tree-trimming equipment to handle the job.

But I do have a Silky Master 360  – a Japanese handsaw with a just-longer than 14″ straight blade and 9 teeth-per-inch – which seems like too many for rough and wet work. It is not. The razor sharp teeth with deep gullets made very quick work indeed of the offending branches, and the rubber grip on the handle gave good purchase to my hand.

The saw is intended for rough cutting, and the manufacturer says the impulse-hardened teeth excel at both crosscuts and rips. I was careful not to twist the saw at I was making my cuts – while the blade is 1.4mm thick, I would guess twisting it in green wood could snap a tooth or two fairly easily…but if that happened, well, the blade is replaceable.

After I was done tree trimming, I used an old toothbrush to remove a few stringy bits of lignum, then wiped the blade with jojoba oil, and put it back where it belongs – at my workbench. It was tempting to stow it with my gardening tools – but I think I’ll simply order a Silky Sugoi 360 Pruning Saw instead. There’s only so much tool abuse in which I can engage before the guilt gets to me.

— Megan Fitzpatrick


Product Recommendations

Here are some supplies and tools we find essential in our everyday work around the shop. We may receive a commission from sales referred by our links; however, we have carefully selected these products for their usefulness and quality.

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Showing 5 comments
  • 7-Thumbs

    Seems to me that the posts of the Editors on this blog are getting unabashedly promotional. Can we please make a distinction between woodworking articles/blogging and advertising.

  • zdillinger

    Not as bad as the time I found my wife using my Wenzloff half-back saw to trim back a tree that overhangs her garden…

  • xMike

    Ahhhh. A “good tool” recommendation. Cool. Looks like both are pretty good. What in the world do you use the saw for at the workbench, however? Does it replace a carcase saw?

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