I've got a few mower blades that are nicked and beat up from hitting various objects over the years. I've already replaced them but kept the old ones as you never know when you need a nice hunk of steel. I was thinking about ways I can repair them for more use. It seems the most common way I've been seeing is to clamp the blade vertical in a vise and grind the cutting edge off to the deepest nick and then re-add the cutting edge. In cases with deep nicks, I've got at least one that is about half way into the cutting edge due to a unseen rock. With this method, that's a lot of metal that will need to be removed - is it time to scrape that blade and repurpose? Even with a re-sharpen, there are still nicks and I'm not sure how much those will affect the quality of the cut but the blade just looks terrible and i am hesitant to put it back on.
Does anyone have any other suggestions for reviving old heavily nicked (not necessarily all with deep nicks but a lot of nicks along the entire cutting edge) blades?
I had a wild idea of using welder to fill the nicks and then grinding down and re-sharpening the blade. Has anyone ever tried this? would the extensive time and effort be worth it vs repurposing and purchasing a new blade? As an example, I see kubota blades for 60" deck are around $23 each on messicks (just to toss out a number).
Dan
Does anyone have any other suggestions for reviving old heavily nicked (not necessarily all with deep nicks but a lot of nicks along the entire cutting edge) blades?
I had a wild idea of using welder to fill the nicks and then grinding down and re-sharpening the blade. Has anyone ever tried this? would the extensive time and effort be worth it vs repurposing and purchasing a new blade? As an example, I see kubota blades for 60" deck are around $23 each on messicks (just to toss out a number).
Dan