Use anything you possibly can to improve your work.
Can you shoot a rifle better free-hand/off-hand or
from a rest?
I've been grinding pretty much free hand for the last 18 years.
And have gotten pretty tired of always having to dedicate a considerable amount of time 'fixing' and tweaking the grind.
Eventually I got tired of it.
I want you to think for a moment about a fellow named Tim Hancock. The man is truly at the top of the knife making game.
In a recent video I watched of him he ground a knife using jigs, round wheels, flat platen and disc sander.
All the time he was at the 2X72 he had the blade on a tool rest.
At one moment he elaborated on that tool rest.
Think of this - I personally have 2 - variable speed belt grinders. $2000.00 each.
I have two mills - about $3000.00 in the two of them.
I have a variable speed reversible disc sander - about $1500.00,
and a surface grinder - another $1500.00.
So about $10,000.00 of equipment comes into play each time I make a blade here at Andersen Forge - just the blade.
And some folks then say that if I use a REST!! it's not a hand made knife??!!
Really??
So, anyway, Tim Hancock at one point in the video stops his grinding and turns to the audience in the room and says, "Don't you owe your customers the best knife you can possibly make?"
I had to agree.
I have since switched almost entirely to grinding with a rest - if I'm making a "normal" knife.
My correction time has almost been eliminated.
I now have a rest that's about 20 inches wide so even large knives are always on the rest no matter how far I go from left to right.
I'm holding my knives on a jig to keep from digging in right in front of the fillet (plunge area) thus causing more "fix time" later.
Everything has improved.
I really do want to give every single one of my customers the best possible knife I can make and stacking the deck in my favor has certainly made that prospect a much more attainable concept.