I've looked at that CDH. That definitely looks like the perfect jig! But as a hobbyist knife maker as I look around my shop and see the thousands of dollars of equipment I remind myself how it all started. I picked up a custom knife and thought no way I'd spend $350 on a knife when I can make one for $3500.
I got the larger one, the MC152 size, I think.I like that! What size contender did you get?
Yep.I am also a hobbyist maker. I have sold a dozen or so, but I also give a lot away to family and friends.
It started as "all I need is a nice grinder". Then a heat treat oven, then an expensive bandsaw, next a drill press...and on and on...
I know I have $20K in tools for sure. I'll never sell enough knives to even start to get my money back. Not to mention I still want a mill!
It's all about the enjoyment and satisfaction of making something for me...
Did I mention I bought a new RH hardness tester. LOL No way I can justify what I"ve spent. But I will say my knife building has paid ten fold. My twin daughters went through college. A mutual friend introduced them to a "financial" college advisor. She helped them SO MUCH! I made her probably some of my saddest knives in my early stages. Let's just say it paid off ten fold. God bless her with those pitiful knives. I have since made better knives to replace those POS! Became good friends and she came to their college graduation parties. Lets just say those knives were PRICELESS.
Then there was this farmer in Ohio that I finally got permission to hunt. I made him a paring knife with a corn cob handle. Long story short I paid ZERO lease fees and slept in his deceased mothers bed in the farm house all FREE. Oh yea as a electrician I did a ton of free electrical work for him but the fat penguin was the knife. Fat penguin is someone that breaks the ice! LOL
So maybe just maybe me making "knives" has paid off. Just not in the way of seeing a check book balance increase.