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Renewing Files
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Those files are hard to come by, so yes you want to save them. If they were mine I would clean them with a fine wire wheel. Wire size in the neighborhood of 0.007”. Brunch along the grooves of the files. We 40 will hold off the rust afterwards in a relatively dry shop.
before the naysayers chirp in…The wires are softer than the file and won’t damage it. Especially if they are thin and compliant. I’ve been doing it for years on the same files with no issues.
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Originally posted by rickyb View PostForgot to mention that any acid eats sharp points faster than surfaces and will dull the file?
The acid has no idea what part is thin or thick. What it does is eat inward on surfaces. A triangular shape like a file tooth will be eaten at from both sides. If the "point" is blunt, the action of the acid eating away the metal will tend to make another sharp point. Since the point has little surface area itself, it wont be eaten as effectively as the other surfaces.
There are no doubt details that make all the difference. But the idea is sound.4357 2773 5647 3671 3645 0087 1276
CNC machines only go through the motions
"There's no pleasing these serpents"......Lewis Carroll
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Clean the files first. Any dirt or oils will deter the acid from doing its job. If the file have become clogged with material, us a hardwood block with a very sharp square corner to push along the file teeth and push out the material clogging them, then perhaps a wire brush or file card, then chemical cleaning using soap and an ultrasonic cleaner if available. Once the file is completely clean, then use an internet search to find how much of what acid for how long is needed.
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Yes.... hydrochloric acid (aka "muriatic") is "shop death". It will cause rust all over the place if used or kept in or near the shop. Sulfuric is not nice stuff, but it is considerably less likely to corrode everything in sight.4357 2773 5647 3671 3645 0087 1276
CNC machines only go through the motions
"There's no pleasing these serpents"......Lewis Carroll
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Originally posted by J Tiers View Post. . .Yet, the file sharpening services do use an acid treatment. . .
The prices are very reasonable too: https://boggstool.com/file-%26-rasp-services
Last edited by chipmaker4130; 05-01-2022, 08:51 PM.Southwest Utah
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I've got some old Boeing Surplus files that were re-sharpened. They worked but they were no where near as nice as new files. Fine for roughing but the surface finish was not nice. From this I'd say one sharpening and then they are done.
I've also got a couple of straight shank triangle files which confused me as they cut on the pull stroke. I only found out some time later that files for die filers cut on the downward pull stroke... which makes total sense. So I'm guessing that the two I had and should still have around here somewhere are for a die filer.
Chilliwack BC, Canada
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I have put dull files in the microwave in a brine of salt and vinegar. They get sharp in minutes.There is nothing noble in being superior to your fellow man; true nobility is being superior to your former self. -Ernest Hemingway
The man who makes no mistakes does not usually make anything.-- Edward John Phelps
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Originally posted by Doozer View Post
I think I might try this in the microwave at work first.
-D
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Last time I put a black polyurethane U-cup seal
in the microwave to soften it. Not so good.
In for only 1 minute, it about caught fire.
It stank so bad, the boss bought a new microwave.
Thus is how Doozer's Shop ended up with a
microwave oven to heat my coffee. The smell
went away after only a few days.
-DoozerDZER
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