Customer Review(s)
Customer Rating: 



Summary: Not bad but not great either
Comment: For what it's worth, I have a set of Rockwell lathe tools that I bought new in 1973 but needed some specialty tools so I bought a set of Benjamin's Best HSS tools from Amazon for them. I am also selling my old Rockwell lathe and thought I'd get new general purpose tools to go with the new lathe and include the old tools with the old lathe. So I bought a set of Windsor Design HSS tools so I could compare the old and the new before I parted with the old ones.
There is very little cosmetic difference between Benjamin's Best HSS and Windsor Design HSS - same size, and the same wood handles. Finish was not as good on the WD and the labeling was painted on the blades rather than etched into the blades as they are on the BB chisels. But are they any good?
The method - both of the sets came semi sharp and will cut wood as delivered but I wanted to compare and keep the best tools. So I used the skew chisel from each set as the reference, re-ground and honed the edge of all three chisels. First I shaved aluminum with each of the skew chisels because I'm impatient and wanted them to dull quickly. After 4-5 slices each I checked and decided aluminum wasn't dulling them fast enough so I got a brass rod and shaved some off it with each chisel - now they showed that there was some wear. Then I took a chunk of 45# particle board and shaved on the edge of it with each chisel until I had an observable defect.
The results - the Rockwell chisel looked sharp (no chips) but did not cut very well. Benjimin's Best cut fine but had tiny, un-feelable (seeable with a magnifying glass) chips in the edge. Windsor Design's had noticeable chips in the edge. But both of the HSS tools were still sharp enough to cut particle board! (Or at least knock chunks off it.)
Good luck with your decision.