I'm on my second pair, I've cut my own hair for many years. The first pair became dull, and they wanted more than the cost of a new clipper to sharpen it. So, I just bought a new clipper. This was very helpful, I'll be sharpening my set before I cut my hair again.
Yea it’s called zero gapping when you have the outer blade and the cutting blade evenly placed together. It allows us barbers to do bold fades and take out skin lines.. Good video man congrats!! And yes if the cutting blade is longer than the outside blade you can seriously cut someone..
I will be trying this for sure. I've always believed that sharpening my clipper blades was "high science", but you've given me confidence. A demonstration of the newly sharpened bladed would've been a good addition to this video. Thanks!
Been giving myself a high and tight for shy of 30 years now and tossed trimmers when they went dull, even once sending blades to the manufacturer for sharpening after having asked customer service where to buy new blades. Thought I'd search if its possible since I was thinking it would be more like sharpening a handsaw, but not at all complex. Excellent video. Content and production-wise.
Exactly, I have 5 sets, not being used because they're dull. Even a new set I had for 2 years my kids bought me I never used them because they wouldn't cut. I bought a good set today because my best set wasn't lining my beard anymore. I'm glad I thought to look up how to sharpen them. I'm glad his video was straight to the point short and sweet
I've had one of these trimmers for about 40 years, changed the blades once as they were damaged but I think I'll get some of those wet stones. I have one that is 400 grit for chisels and and stuff, I enjoy using it. Thanks for the tip.
Great informational video man. We are same, I cut my son's hair since he was two and now turning 8. Great to see this, as he was already complaining from his hair getting caught on last haircut. Thanks!
Memories of Ma cutting our hair as kids...the nicks and snags...hair pulling! Till someone planted the idea/shortcut of using the bowlcut in her head. The humiliation reached even new levels!
Thank you. Nicely done video. I've got 4 different old, worn clippers under my bathroom sink that I can sharpen now instead of buying a new one every time.
You forgot to mention that sharpening stones need to be dead flat in order to sharpen clipper blades. If there is any dishing in your stone at all you will ruin your clipper blades. If you don't have the ability to get your stones dead flat then you are much better off using sandpaper over float glass. Edit: I'll add here that *quality* trimmer blades are generally hollow (concave) ground and need special equipment for sharpening. You will ruin these blades attempting to sharpen them even on dead flat stones.
@@EagleRun23 That's great, but the problem comes when someone else follows your video without flattening their stone first and then wonders why their clippers are worse than then when they started. Meanwhile, they have basically ruined their clipper blades in the process.
Amazon Affiliate Links: Wet 1000 Grit Sand Paper amzn.to/44iGEuV Sharpening Stone Set amzn.to/3pD38I7 Ballistol oil amzn.to/3R5SQun More at Eaglerun23.com
Yes sir when the moving blade is extends beyond the still blade that’s essential placing a razor on your skin and ya don’t want that. The second key point is not to tap the blades with a metal object like that screwdriver either. Tip: After attaching the blades rather loosely, place the blades on a flat surface and carefully tilt the clippers towards the body of the clippers so that the moving blade is even and slightly lower than the moving blade. Tighten each side slowly so that the edges remain level. Try that.
fantastic comment, thanks man. I am an amatur, just my boys hair for 7 years, haha, These sharpening videos do really well so i make one every time I sharpen mine. learned a lot, hopefully people can learn a basic skill and extend their blades!
@@Dennis-c1w : it's primery use is in the automotive trade for rubbing down paintwork & body filler' 'sandpaper' is never used also known as wet & dry paper .......
Careful! Clipper blades are not completely flat, they are very slightly concaved... I spent thousands on a machine with a special wheel that sharpens clippers properly. By sharpening on a flat stone you are removing that concave that the manufacturer intended.
I have only ever seen them sharpened flat. These even have a guide on the opposite flat to keep it flat. I’ll have to look this up maybe Wahl has info.
When I was in dog grooming school I had a friend who had a mobile sharpening service. I turned him onto my school because students were needing their shears sharpened. Someone asked him to do their clipper blades and he ruined them because he was unaware that indeed these blades are considered "hollow ground". I can't help but wonder how many folks clippers don't work anymore after watching this video.
@@EagleRun23What @BladeWorx-ga and @joesbarbecue1 are saying is true. You may be able to get away with this type of flat grind in various rare (or very casual) use cases, but almost all electric clippers are designed to be used having blades with a (very subtle) concave grind. This is vital for smooth shearing action to work properly on hair (of all types). The principle is similar with scissors; If you look closely a pair of cheap junk drawer/grade-school art class scissors, you'll see their blades lay 'flat' on top of each other. Now, compare them to any good pair of hairdresser and/or pet grooming scissors, you'll see that the blades (of the good ones) do indeed have a slight curve 'inwards' (in towards each other). When they're closed, you'll notice that only tips actually touch -- you'll see a small gap in towards the middle area between the 2 blades because of this profile. This is similar to a concave grind on electric clipper blades, in that it causes significantly higher pressure in a much smaller point that the blades meet each other along the shearing edge range.
I have a piece of glass set up with several strips of sandpaper glued to it that I use to sharpen chisels. I can't believe I never thought to use it to sharpen clipper blades. I've had the same Wahl clippers for close to 20 years and the blades are kind of dull. I was thinking about buying new blades, but I'll just try this instead. Thanks.
I've bought a fair number of trimmers...most garbage out of the box. Stay away from budget 20-30 dollar ones. Picked up the Mueller Ultragroom cordless hair clippers about 6 mths back and their the best pro set I've ever owned. Rechargable and portable enough to take camping they use usb 5v plug. I can cut beard and hair and only run charge down to 89-90% but they fast charge in 5 or so minutes.
I have a Wahl beard and mustache trimmer that cost around 70 dollars and I’ve had a heck of a time finding replacement blades that are any good. I’ve purchased some that are supposedly the original Wahl brand but they don’t work nearly as well. I hope I can sharpen them! I don’t know if you’ve ever sharpened that style before but I feel it’s worth a try since watching your video. Thank you!
Ok just found this video, very well explained thank you. Quick question with button I guess you would call it to move the blades up and down do you need to keep the blades all the way down or up I know sill question but thank you.
Some "tutorials" where showing to have a angle on those flat blades, witch made no sense. I am glad your's was very accurate, descriptive and simple. You even shown why they are called WHET-stone lol Didn't know 400 grid sandpaper was still to coarse (and probably not even to, no flattening), getting one of those amazon 400/1000/3000/8000 set in a week to try it.
I've been cutting my own hair with a Wahl trimmer for a long time now. I know if I have the guide all the way out that the blades get overwhelmed if I don't go slow enough so I'm thinking maybe I need to sharpen mine too. lol.
my old book, just mentioned starting at a finer grit. 400-600 could be a start but I would recommend finishing with 800-1000+. if it works it works! :)
Use a piece of tempered glass plate and attached a sheet of 2000 grit sand paper to the glass with spray adhesive. Spray paper with water and lightly rub blade in circular motion 👌 😎
I hate lining up the blades. I need to open the curtains to make it bright in the room to get it perfectly straight. I have to do to all my corded and cordless clippers. 5 of them plus my dog's clipper.
I don't know why people are afraid of coarse grit. It helps you and speeds you up a lot. The biggest mistake people make all the time is going too fine, too early. 95% of the work is done on a coarse grit. And then just polish up the surface to whatever number you want to go. The next typical mistake is skipping intermediate grits. It just makes it harder to get to the desired surface roughness profile. If you start low enough and have sufficient steps, it is all just a matter of a couple of strokes on all but the lowest grit.
I know someone that "sharpened" some clipper blades for someone by grinding them on a surface grinder. They got upset because they were more dull than before they gave them to the person to sharpen.
1:56 these are water stones. if you already have an oil stone, you can use any light machine oil, wd40 to actual honing oil. some are better than others, but just use what you have.
I love that fact I came here to learn to sharpen clippers and I see receivers and mags in the background (another of my interests). Great video sir!!! MAGA!!
Does this leave a burr inside the teeth though? I've been thinking about how to sharpen mine and I've thought I would need a thin sharpening "blade" to slide between the teeth.
For what it's worth, almost all clipper blades are hollow ground, not flat. If you rely on clipper blades to make a living, sharpen them correctly or you will be replacing them and they aren't cheap.
some are hollow ground. Most barbers buy new blades, and dont sharpen them. the 2-3 i have asked. This is a diy deal for us home clipper users. my blade was not hollow ground so it works fine.
I have one of those brands with self sharpener blades for several years. I had no problems yet. But I also wonder if it's a hoax or not. What do you think?
Since this was a machining process using abrasives I would have emphasized getting the two parts surgically clean to remove loose abrasive material. Just telling people to clean the parts afterwords is not enough. Any abrasives left on the parts will cause damage and dull the cutting edges.
I'm on my second pair, I've cut my own hair for many years. The first pair became dull, and they wanted more than the cost of a new clipper to sharpen it. So, I just bought a new clipper. This was very helpful, I'll be sharpening my set before I cut my hair again.
You did a fantastic job in explaining the whole process. You didn’t drag it out or add any extra bs. Bravo
Worked like a charm. I honestly believe they're sharper than when I purchased the Wahl. Thank you!
how long did you do the whole process for as ive tried and it wont work
Yea it’s called zero gapping when you have the outer blade and the cutting blade evenly placed together.
It allows us barbers to do bold fades and take out skin lines..
Good video man congrats!!
And yes if the cutting blade is longer than the outside blade you can seriously cut someone..
Confirmed my thoughts!! Thank you sir!
I will be trying this for sure. I've always believed that sharpening my clipper blades was "high science", but you've given me confidence. A demonstration of the newly sharpened bladed would've been a good addition to this video. Thanks!
Naw. You really can’t mess them up even if you did they are fixable :)
I think that the sharpening is the simple part. Keeping your stones flat enough is the hard part.
Been giving myself a high and tight for shy of 30 years now and tossed trimmers when they went dull, even once sending blades to the manufacturer for sharpening after having asked customer service where to buy new blades. Thought I'd search if its possible since I was thinking it would be more like sharpening a handsaw, but not at all complex. Excellent video. Content and production-wise.
Exactly, I have 5 sets, not being used because they're dull. Even a new set I had for 2 years my kids bought me I never used them because they wouldn't cut. I bought a good set today because my best set wasn't lining my beard anymore. I'm glad I thought to look up how to sharpen them. I'm glad his video was straight to the point short and sweet
I've had one of these trimmers for about 40 years, changed the blades once as they were damaged but I think I'll get some of those wet stones. I have one that is 400 grit for chisels and and stuff, I enjoy using it. Thanks for the tip.
fantastic, they could be sharpened 20+ times? no idea, mine are at like 5-6 I cut my boys hair this weekend! ha
Great tutorial,did this while i am snowed in, nicely sharp, lubed, and ready to go...thank you
Great informational video man. We are same, I cut my son's hair since he was two and now turning 8. Great to see this, as he was already complaining from his hair getting caught on last haircut. Thanks!
Awesome!! Love to see it!
Same I cut mine and my two sons hair
Great vid man from one dad to another thank you 🙏
Memories of Ma cutting our hair as kids...the nicks and snags...hair pulling!
Till someone planted the idea/shortcut of using the bowlcut in her head. The humiliation reached even new levels!
Absolutely excellent explanation, camera work, and demo. Thank you. Will sharpen mine today as replacement blades are no longer sold.
Thank you. Nicely done video. I've got 4 different old, worn clippers under my bathroom sink that I can sharpen now instead of buying a new one every time.
Simple easy going clarification with no head ripping music.
salute you.
Great video, very helpful and explained in simple terms. Thanks, greetings from the UK
Thanks for teaching me how to sharpen my tremor blades. I've been cutting my hair for years and never took any of my tremors apart until now
Awesome!!
You forgot to mention that sharpening stones need to be dead flat in order to sharpen clipper blades. If there is any dishing in your stone at all you will ruin your clipper blades. If you don't have the ability to get your stones dead flat then you are much better off using sandpaper over float glass.
Edit: I'll add here that *quality* trimmer blades are generally hollow (concave) ground and need special equipment for sharpening. You will ruin these blades attempting to sharpen them even on dead flat stones.
I keep mine flat, and I have a flatner. but sandpaper on glass tile works great too!
@@EagleRun23 That's great, but the problem comes when someone else follows your video without flattening their stone first and then wonders why their clippers are worse than then when they started. Meanwhile, they have basically ruined their clipper blades in the process.
Used to use 1/4" glass plate, high grit emory and polishing paste to get a nice mirror finish on copper computer heat sinks!
That is understood to anyone who sharpens...
This is exactly what I was going to ask; you’ve hit the nail on its head 👍
Didnt know i could use my stones to sharpen these?! Thanks!
Thank you! Rocket science explained so even I can do it! This comment comes after I did the deed, no burn and great cutting!
Excellent!
The way they set the evenness is to set the blades on a flat surface and on a slight angle towards the moving blade , then tighten the screws.
So it be more cutting than chopping , 😊
Amazon Affiliate Links:
Wet 1000 Grit Sand Paper amzn.to/44iGEuV
Sharpening Stone Set amzn.to/3pD38I7
Ballistol oil amzn.to/3R5SQun
More at Eaglerun23.com
Yes sir when the moving blade is extends beyond the still blade that’s essential placing a razor on your skin and ya don’t want that.
The second key point is not to tap the blades with a metal object like that screwdriver either.
Tip:
After attaching the blades rather loosely, place the blades on a flat surface and carefully tilt the clippers towards the body of the clippers so that the moving blade is even and slightly lower than the moving blade. Tighten each side slowly so that the edges remain level. Try that.
fantastic comment, thanks man. I am an amatur, just my boys hair for 7 years, haha, These sharpening videos do really well so i make one every time I sharpen mine. learned a lot, hopefully people can learn a basic skill and extend their blades!
Great video.thank you for posting this. You’ve demystified this for me😀
Awesome info man i also cut all three of my kids hair and this will help me so much❤
Just a heads up' Guy's thats not 'sand paper' it's bonded carborundom granules of differant grades 👌
haha, 10-4
@@EagleRun23 ; good buddy
I had a teacher at school who told my class that “sandpaper” was what you put in the bottom of bird cages!😂
Do you sand with it?
@@Dennis-c1w : it's primery use is in the automotive trade for rubbing down paintwork & body filler' 'sandpaper' is never used also known as wet & dry paper .......
Careful! Clipper blades are not completely flat, they are very slightly concaved... I spent thousands on a machine with a special wheel that sharpens clippers properly. By sharpening on a flat stone you are removing that concave that the manufacturer intended.
I have only ever seen them sharpened flat. These even have a guide on the opposite flat to keep it flat. I’ll have to look this up maybe Wahl has info.
OP (original poster) I’m guessing yours are not wahl brand? That’s why they are concave? Do most barbers have these sharpeners that you have?
When I was in dog grooming school I had a friend who had a mobile sharpening service. I turned him onto my school because students were needing their shears sharpened.
Someone asked him to do their clipper blades and he ruined them because he was unaware that indeed these blades are considered "hollow ground".
I can't help but wonder how many folks clippers don't work anymore after watching this video.
@@EagleRun23What @BladeWorx-ga and @joesbarbecue1 are saying is true. You may be able to get away with this type of flat grind in various rare (or very casual) use cases, but almost all electric clippers are designed to be used having blades with a (very subtle) concave grind. This is vital for smooth shearing action to work properly on hair (of all types). The principle is similar with scissors; If you look closely a pair of cheap junk drawer/grade-school art class scissors, you'll see their blades lay 'flat' on top of each other. Now, compare them to any good pair of hairdresser and/or pet grooming scissors, you'll see that the blades (of the good ones) do indeed have a slight curve 'inwards' (in towards each other). When they're closed, you'll notice that only tips actually touch -- you'll see a small gap in towards the middle area between the 2 blades because of this profile. This is similar to a concave grind on electric clipper blades, in that it causes significantly higher pressure in a much smaller point that the blades meet each other along the shearing edge range.
@@EagleRun23comment deleter! (detail regarding shearing geometry/physics and why Bladeworx-ga and Joesbarbecue1 are correct)
Excellent Instructions and Great video !
Glad you enjoyed it!
I have that same model of trimmers and thanks cause now I can keep them
Giddy up!
I have a piece of glass set up with several strips of sandpaper glued to it that I use to sharpen chisels.
I can't believe I never thought to use it to sharpen clipper blades. I've had the same Wahl clippers for close to 20 years and the blades are kind of dull.
I was thinking about buying new blades, but I'll just try this instead. Thanks.
I've bought a fair number of trimmers...most garbage out of the box. Stay away from budget 20-30 dollar ones.
Picked up the Mueller Ultragroom cordless hair clippers about 6 mths back and their the best pro set I've ever owned. Rechargable and portable enough to take camping they use usb 5v plug. I can cut beard and hair and only run charge down to 89-90% but they fast charge in 5 or so minutes.
I have a Wahl beard and mustache trimmer that cost around 70 dollars and I’ve had a heck of a time finding replacement blades that are any good. I’ve purchased some that are supposedly the original Wahl brand but they don’t work nearly as well. I hope I can sharpen them! I don’t know if you’ve ever sharpened that style before but I feel it’s worth a try since watching your video. Thank you!
i dont think you can mess it up, give it a shot!
What a great video - many thanks!
You are welcome!
Thank you for the tutorial mine's been pulling. Not any more!
Cheers brother, I'm going to sharpen mine tomorrow.
Thanks , I was thinking of bringing out my grinder but this is much easier
Might check car parts stores for you sandpaper,I used the same thing for cutting opals once.
Ok just found this video, very well explained thank you. Quick question with button I guess you would call it to move the blades up and down do you need to keep the blades all the way down or up I know sill question but thank you.
@@drmikeyb1 when you set the gap set them when it’s all the way down. Aka closest setting. :)
Some "tutorials" where showing to have a angle on those flat blades, witch made no sense. I am glad your's was very accurate, descriptive and simple. You even shown why they are called WHET-stone lol
Didn't know 400 grid sandpaper was still to coarse (and probably not even to, no flattening), getting one of those amazon 400/1000/3000/8000 set in a week to try it.
Also have the same stone set, recently added the 5 plate diamond set for $20.00.
This is a great tip. I’ve been sending mine back to Wahl for sharpening for years.
Thanks for the video . Well explained
Nicely explained, you have a good voice bro
Excellent video ! And nice lowers 😉😉
thank ya, thats mostly what work on in my videos, but i am just a regular guy and all sorts of stuff ends up on my work bench. haha
@@EagleRun23 love it ! I’ll check out your other stuff my friend !
I've been cutting my own hair with a Wahl trimmer for a long time now. I know if I have the guide all the way out that the blades get overwhelmed if I don't go slow enough so I'm thinking maybe I need to sharpen mine too. lol.
Right on!
You can use mirror to adjust the position of those blades. As flat service the top one cannot pass the bottom one.
No need just dip the tip in petroleum zippo fluids and switch on for 2 mins.... FACT
Very sharp
Ok I’ll try that. Stay tuned. Might be a week or two but we can try it.
Mine has flat head screws. It goes back in the same position.
Thanks for the upload, I'm going to give this a try.
please do! let me know!
You have to align the first teeth of the top and bottom blades when you reinstall them if I remember the instructions
Very nice! Thank you!👍👍👍
Great explanation.
Thank you. Clippers done and dusted. 👍
Great job!
Am in Ghana where can I get some of the sharping stone
does amazon deliver? :)
that s really helpful video.....thanks for tips !
Most welcome!
Thanks brother for the video I'm frm south afrika
Welcome!
I had no freaking clue I can sharpen my clippers my whetstones. Thank you 😭
Give it a shot. Can’t make them worse! Haha
@@EagleRun23 you’re absolutely correct 🤣. I’m very excited to try it this evening. Thank you for your wonderful video!
I use 400 grit and worked fine. Why do you think 600 is too aggressive?
my old book, just mentioned starting at a finer grit. 400-600 could be a start but I would recommend finishing with 800-1000+. if it works it works! :)
Exact same pair, came with edgers as well.
Use a piece of tempered glass plate and attached a sheet of 2000 grit sand paper to the glass with spray adhesive. Spray paper with water and lightly rub blade in circular motion 👌 😎
I did it that way in the other video. yup
I hate lining up the blades. I need to open the curtains to make it bright in the room to get it perfectly straight. I have to do to all my corded and cordless clippers. 5 of them plus my dog's clipper.
Thanks explained well ,can improve my domestic experience
Cut anbody yet?
I don't know why people are afraid of coarse grit. It helps you and speeds you up a lot. The biggest mistake people make all the time is going too fine, too early. 95% of the work is done on a coarse grit. And then just polish up the surface to whatever number you want to go.
The next typical mistake is skipping intermediate grits. It just makes it harder to get to the desired surface roughness profile.
If you start low enough and have sufficient steps, it is all just a matter of a couple of strokes on all but the lowest grit.
I know someone that "sharpened" some clipper blades for someone by grinding them on a surface grinder. They got upset because they were more dull than before they gave them to the person to sharpen.
If a surface grinder is what I think it is. That’s an odd choice. Would require the opposing size to be perfectly flat too I think.
The grinder must have heated the blades too much and softened it.
What type of oil are you using to Sharp the blade
1:56 these are water stones. if you already have an oil stone, you can use any light machine oil, wd40 to actual honing oil. some are better than others, but just use what you have.
Please mention 2 3 oils that we can use
Which liquid did you use
My old man was a walking balistol advertisement.
@@sisseeboy wearing a Ballistol hat rn! Ha
I use a "hand-powered" cliipper, so cutting somebody is not in the cards, but it is possible to "pull" on the hair if it is not sharp.
I love that fact I came here to learn to sharpen clippers and I see receivers and mags in the background (another of my interests). Great video sir!!! MAGA!!
Very cool! I do builds on things you might like! welcome here any time!
Well done!
Now I need to go do my clippers which I am sure are not as good as I think
Can I use sand paper?
Does this leave a burr inside the teeth though? I've been thinking about how to sharpen mine and I've thought I would need a thin sharpening "blade" to slide between the teeth.
Yes. Controlling moving generating burr IS sharpening. This is how they are intended to be sharpened. Either on a stone, sand paper, or diamond wheel.
Is it possible to buy these separately? Like buying the blades only without the machine
I would imagine they have replacements available.
Any beauty supply store sells replacement blade sets
That setup is called gapping. Some of the plastic combs will have a ridge in them to help with this gapping the blade.
Hair trimming video and he got a Glock clip on the table, I trust him
@@youngteti9253 yes sir! Thank ya
Are you using water or which liquid are you using to apply on the stone
@@HillaryAndanjw awesome. How are you today!? these are water stones. I have a link for you pinned and here is the time stamp 0:46
🤔ok but i do have a this kinda problem with a new hair clippers wich i bought from take alot😊
Where do you set blade if there is no lever?
You set them even. To cut different lengths of hair off then you have to use different sized guard attachments on top.
1:20 i can never find any fine grit sand paper only 600 or sometimes 800 grit
good, i left a link!
If you want to buy it locally you can find those finer grit sandpapers in the automotive section of stores like Walmart, or at an autobody shop.
Sometimes at an Auto body supply store ,good luck
Please can you tell me where and how too get this stone
@@adebayojohannisiaq2490 pinned comment
You didn't show how to do this with the sand paper, or did I miss this, thanks
Look at the sharpening playlist, I have a few dif methods.
great instruction-thank you
thanks!
Standard issue clippers 😂
Ill have to try this thanks
If it’s your clippers first sharpen then maybe take a close up photo to see how blades are adjusted before taking apart.
Thank you sir for the information
For what it's worth, almost all clipper blades are hollow ground, not flat. If you rely on clipper blades to make a living, sharpen them correctly or you will be replacing them and they aren't cheap.
some are hollow ground. Most barbers buy new blades, and dont sharpen them. the 2-3 i have asked. This is a diy deal for us home clipper users. my blade was not hollow ground so it works fine.
What type of oil did u put on there for rust
I use balistol pretty much exclusively. amzn.to/3R5SQun
@@EagleRun23 thanks
explained well.
Do you have to wet the sand paper aswell
They call it wet/dry paper. I always prefer wet. Spray bottle works great.
@@EagleRun23 thanks for the info
I have one of those brands with self sharpener blades for several years. I had no problems yet. But I also wonder if it's a hoax or not. What do you think?
self sharpening, maybe to an extent, but I cant imagine how a little intervention with a stone would hurt.
In a world where extreme hair styles exist . It s " Almost " impossible to do a bad hair cut . 😂 LOL
Fact! Haha
We use DMT diamond stones now.
Do I need diamond cut stone or any honing stone?
any whet stone, wet sandpaper, bout anything will work.
@@EagleRun23 ok thx
Some barbers say to keep the stone dry 🤔
bout a dozen ways to get the same results, I have 3 videos on this topic each covering different methods.
I do exactly the same with my Wahl
How can get this stone in my country please
I have links here for you. Amazon works all over the world
How to use sandpaper to sharpener the trimmer
I think a few years back I did a video on a different pair of clippers on sand paper.
Sir what type of oil do you use to sharpen
Any light machine oil works. Wd40 would work in a pinch.
My stones here are water stones. Just use water.
@@EagleRun23is it ok to use mineral oil?
Why didn’t you use the 600 grit paper?
that would be too coarse for this work. 1000 2000 maybe finish higher even
Since this was a machining process using abrasives I would have emphasized getting the two parts surgically clean to remove loose abrasive material. Just telling people to clean the parts afterwords is not enough. Any abrasives left on the parts will cause damage and dull the cutting edges.
it is enough.
Are you selling them ghost rifles?
no, I just make them for fun :) lots of build projects on my channel. just a hobby.
Ye Kahan se mily ge