Sharpening and Cleaning Files With Vinegar ??? 🤔

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  • Опубликовано: 17 окт 2024

Комментарии • 55

  • @DrRupe-bi4gn
    @DrRupe-bi4gn Год назад +2

    When a file is used on soft material like aluminum, you can use the same material to remove the the filings that stick. Holing the file in your left hand, stroke the material parallel with the teeth - pushing away from you. This was taught to me by lifetime tool and die/mold and jig machinist.(born 1938)

  • @OldSneelock
    @OldSneelock Год назад +8

    Old Sneelock's Workshop
    As a machinist and tool maker since 1975, I used files of all types. Wearing them out was a common issue. When I became supervisor and was charged with purchasing files for the tool room and maintenance it was common to go through several boxes of files a month.
    The tool makers and machine repair people tossed the dull ones in a bin and they went out with the scrap. At $3.00 to $5.00/ file it was considered a cost of business.
    In my own shop I found myself going through files at the same rate. I wasn't buying them new. I was getting them at auctions, garage sales, and flea markets. They were worn to start with and didn't get better in use.
    A friend of mine told me about sharpening files with acid.
    I was skeptical when I first heard of it. After trying the method and refining it a bit I accepted that it worked.
    I have been using acid to sharpen files for 15 years or more.
    Here is a thread from Build Something Cool. He had tried the method and we discussed the pros and cons of the method while fielding questions from the group.
    This link will take you to his demonstration. ruclips.net/video/rRakH7TrE2E/видео.html
    6 years ago
    Thanks for finding the Popular Mechanics article. That answers the "I won't believe it without photomicrographs crowd." I wonder what their next objection will be?
    Reply
    Build Something Cool
    ·
    5 replies
    Build Something Cool
    Build Something Cool
    6 years ago
    LOL
    Reply
    DajjaD
    DajjaD
    6 years ago
    funny thats the only article that says this is sharpening that ive seen
    Reply
    Stanley Chang
    Stanley Chang
    5 years ago
    Thanks for your comment. I wouldn't have looked in the description otherwise. Why doesn't this work for knives, chisels, or drills though?
    Reply
    Evan Penny
    Evan Penny
    4 years ago
    Hey guys, if you don't like the idea of acid sharpening don't use it.
    It does not matter to me whether you need to find reasons to contradict the idea or not, but some of your comments are really a bit thoughtless.

    Technically you probably could use acid to sharpen knives etc, but you would not use it. The knife is a thin tool and eroding away some of its thickness is unhelpful. Chisels do not suffer from a lack of thickness, but eroding metal would alter its dimensions, also the erosive process is not very uniform, so getting a nice even sharpen will not happen. Drills also do not want to have their dimensions altered. Also with the drill bit the angle of the cutting area is quite large, unlike the angle of the cutting part of a file. The result would be minimal sharpening for significant loss of metal and loss of dimensional accuracy of the tool.
    Surely, the proof of the pudding is in the eating. Just try it.

    Reply
    Old Sneelock's Workshop
    Old Sneelock's Workshop
    4 years ago
    The idea of sharpening drill bits as a test of the process has been brought up before. The differing actions of a file and a drill bit are the reason it isn't used to sharpen drill bits.
    Drills use the width of the point to define the diameter of the hole that is drilled.
    Acid removes metal from every surface it comes in contact with. The drill bit will become smaller in diameter just as fast as it becomes sharp. You end up with a drill bit that is sharper but with a random sized diameter
    The same, two surfaces being eaten away, process exists because the diameter is the measure of the distance between the two sides of the bit.
    It will work on a knife but who wants a thinner shorter knife?
    Besides each of the other suggested arguments against using acid, points out a device that is normally sharpened in a different way, as an example of the acid process being a failure. If it were as easy to run a stone down the edge of the files teeth as it is a knife we all wouldn't bother with the mess of acid sharpening.
    Milling cutters are ground on center grinders because they have fewer flutes than a file would have in the same distance.
    The operation of the file doesn't depend on it's width or thickness as long as it is sharp and strong enough to not break during use. 😊
    If you would like a good history of files, how they are made, and used I recommend The File It’s History Making And Uses by Henry Disston & Son. Upload of a copy from the Stanford University Library is available here.
    play.google.com/books/reader?id=1mNBAQAAIAAJ&printsec=frontcover&output=reader&hl=en&pg=GBS.PA7

  • @johncoops6897
    @johncoops6897 Год назад +8

    I have been testing with electrolysis and a Constant Current power supply so I can dial in the voltage and current. I used a fine brass wire brush afterwards to get rid of the black gunge.
    It kind-of works if you wind the amperage up high enough so that the rust "pops" off the surface. On badly rusted files you can see where the teeth are chipped and eroded, so whilst they bite it's not as good as a new sharp file.
    Some people say that Citric Acid is better than Vinegar (mild Acetic Acid). Paint them in Phosphoric Acid after cleaning to re-establish the grey anti-rust coating.

    • @autumn5592
      @autumn5592 Год назад +1

      I wouldn't use Electrolosis on files (or axes and knives) because of hydrogen embrittlement.

  • @carlosperez-dw1dp
    @carlosperez-dw1dp Год назад +1

    Hace unos años vi aquí en YT este método y lo probé. Lamentablemente decía que las limas debían estar solo una hora en vinagre por lo que el resultado no fue muy bueno . Voy a probar dejarlas tres días. Gracia.

  • @andymsmith
    @andymsmith Год назад +3

    I just started restoring files now for a month with white vinegar and it work some but have found cleaning vinegar at dollar tree when added half and half with white vinegar 1 foam forms when the files are cleaning and 2 foamgets brown at the top after sitting 4 days I then clean them with awesome cleaner and it brings the Grey back on some of the files to a new look.

  • @bryanmcwhorter1586
    @bryanmcwhorter1586 Год назад +3

    Grobet USA has been in business since the early 1900s. They primarily make tools for jewelry, dentistry, engraving, etc.

  • @captainsmokey9223
    @captainsmokey9223 Год назад +3

    You said that you put in vinegar 3 days but I would like to know average temperature. I put in files today and temperature is 0 ~10 degrees celsius so I plan to leave it 4~5 days.

  • @chananielwizman2401
    @chananielwizman2401 Год назад +4

    maybe higher acid conc might have helped? when you tested them thinking should have rested one end of workpiece on table and then filed. Once saw a thread on PM I guess the question is still unanswered. Thanks.

  • @cmjudco
    @cmjudco Год назад +2

    Wow that is amazing....like magic! Ha! How does the vinegar make the "teeth" come back?? I am definitely baffled...but science was never my strong suite! I am definitely amazed!

  • @red2965
    @red2965 Год назад +2

    Have one clogged with aluminum how would that work?
    Love that it had dbl cut action.

  • @waynedavies3185
    @waynedavies3185 Год назад +2

    With the vinegar soaking, you're actually cleaning out the teeth areas that have been plugged up with both rust and dirt. By soaking your cleaning and exposing the cutting teeth again in a more proper cutting manner. That's why they now cut again.. Plugged up teeth doesn't cut properly.

  • @scottmasson3336
    @scottmasson3336 Год назад +1

    Lets call it rejuvenating the file. I have been doing this for years with full sftrength white vinegar overnight. I clean the file with a piece of copper pipe. Good for use on swiss files.

  • @johnhall8455
    @johnhall8455 Год назад +6

    It doesn’t actually sharpen them, it just removes the rust, crud and chips….it will then obviously cut better…acid dissolves metal, including the sharp cutting points…

  • @autumn5592
    @autumn5592 Год назад +11

    Using acid to 'sharpen' files does not work -- common misconception.
    They remove material from all surfaces, they cannot leave a point for the teeth.
    What it does is remove all debris and gunk off the file, allowing it to cut cleaner, and have clear grooves/teeth which aid with chip removal.
    It just makes them feel sharper, well until they get dirty again.

  • @gvet47
    @gvet47 Год назад +2

    Why would you nit start with a file card and use the stiff wire to remove material in the file and then use the acid. It the karge particles are there tge acid cannot clean the file steel.

  • @bocody
    @bocody Год назад +1

    Henley’s Formulas for Home and Workshop, that 100 year old book, has a procedure for this using nitric acid. I don’t know a source for the acid though.

  • @rickmcdonald1557
    @rickmcdonald1557 Год назад +5

    Why would you dilute the vinegar with water??

    • @OneWildTurkey
      @OneWildTurkey Год назад

      Good question, because vinegar is already diluted with water when you buy it at the store. (almost nobody reads labels!)

  • @jjcale2288
    @jjcale2288 Год назад +5

    You can use that vinegar for darkening wood as a chemical dye

    • @makeamericagratefulagain
      @makeamericagratefulagain Год назад

      Depending on the quality, vinegar is also good for flavoring food.

    • @scottmasson3336
      @scottmasson3336 Год назад

      Colouring wood uses vinegaroon which is something like steel wool soaked in vinegar for a couple of days. You need a high tannin wood before it works. It will work on leather too.

  • @geraldclavenna6413
    @geraldclavenna6413 Год назад +1

    Thanks I intend to give it a try

  • @lawrencefure2102
    @lawrencefure2102 Год назад +1

    Many years ago I read that soaking a file in a 50/50 mixture of sulfuric acid and water will sharpen an old file. I never tried this though.

  • @peterlafayette5595
    @peterlafayette5595 Год назад +7

    Sorry, you can't sharpen files, maybe clean them a little, that as about it.

  • @Grantthetruthteller
    @Grantthetruthteller Год назад +9

    That will not sharpen your files, it may get some dirt out of the file teeth so the file will work slightly better. For a real cleaning of your files just purchase a quality file card and clean the files frequently.

    • @hansnielsen7206
      @hansnielsen7206 Год назад +2

      Hello Grant, of all the posts I have read about sharpening files yours is the only one I can agree with. When a file is dull, there is nothing you can do to sharpen it, but when a file is rusty and dirty you can use rust remover or vinegar to clean it, but a file card will do the same and the file will work better again. There is no sharpening. To make your files last a long time, never use your file on material harder than your file. I am 80 y/o and started my apprenticeship to become a Tool and Die Maker on April first 1959 in Hamburg/Germany, and I am still learning even though I can not work any more for health reasons, Grant, you are the only one that is not spreading the B/S about sharpening, Thank You.

    • @Grantthetruthteller
      @Grantthetruthteller Год назад

      @@hansnielsen7206 great to hear from you. Seasoned workers like you and I (I'm 71 years old) seem to have a bullshit detector that younger generations seem to have lost because they don't think but instead they rely on what 5hey read on the internet. The internet can always be relied upon and can be totally trusted. That last statement for sure set off your bullshit detector, I hope.

    • @wrstew1272
      @wrstew1272 Год назад +1

      @@hansnielsen7206 - absolutely correct. Good files are really hard to find, and expensive. Grobet and Barco are what I currently try to find, but the Nickelson that I grew up with got outsourced to foreign lands and seems to be made of far lesser material, or the heat treatment just is wrong 😢. Files are precious precision cutting tools that should be time life items and current Utube creators don’t understand what and why the process works. Us oldtimers understand.

    • @rafaeltorre1643
      @rafaeltorre1643 Год назад

      @@wrstew1272To me it’s obvious. How could you possibly sharpen grooves that cross cross? Not possible. Not like a knife.

  • @barryhunt5357
    @barryhunt5357 9 месяцев назад

    Thats how I clean mine, I use 100% vinegar then wash them with baking soda, oil them up with 30 weight oil and wrap them in burlap.

  • @user-rw3qq2sr1z
    @user-rw3qq2sr1z 9 месяцев назад +1

    A friend of mine that owns a garage stores his files in a jar of vinegar in the garage

  • @SteveBueche1027
    @SteveBueche1027 Год назад +1

    Use the Cleaning vinegar. It’s like 40% as apposed to the other stuff which is 10%

  • @bocody
    @bocody Год назад +1

    I took it a step farther and added a splash of Evaporust. The file looks and cuts like new

  • @oficinakitdicas6364
    @oficinakitdicas6364 Год назад +3

    Ótimo trabalho com excelente informações.

  • @HighGear7445
    @HighGear7445 Год назад +6

    A file card is the easy way.

  • @richardwakelin843
    @richardwakelin843 Год назад +6

    Save your effort and get a good file card & look after your tools. I don't think you can actually re-sharpen files

  • @kennethtalbott2233
    @kennethtalbott2233 Год назад +2

    nice job

  • @danhayward9186
    @danhayward9186 Год назад +5

    All you have is a clean blunt file

  • @MarkATrombley
    @MarkATrombley Год назад +6

    Soak in lye to remove aluminum from the files.

    • @kep-kraftindustries3759
      @kep-kraftindustries3759  Год назад +1

      I heard you can use a piece of copper pipe pushing parallel to the teeth to remove stubborn items lodged in the teeth

    • @johncoops6897
      @johncoops6897 Год назад

      Put CHALK on files to stop aluminium from sticking as you file it. Prevention is better than cure.

    • @MarkATrombley
      @MarkATrombley Год назад +2

      @@johncoops6897One of the files he found already has aluminum stuck in the teeth. A bit too late for prevention.

    • @autumn5592
      @autumn5592 Год назад

      I use a soft scribe to push the pinning out.

    • @OldSneelock
      @OldSneelock Год назад +1

      @@kep-kraftindustries3759 That is my preferred method of cleaning pinning from a file.
      I do that before soaking the file in sulfuric to do the actual sharpening.
      If there is pinning or junk in the teeth of the file, the acid has to eat through the junk before it can sharpen the teeth. It acts to mask the file and cause spotty sharpening. 😁😎

  • @PrinterMatt87
    @PrinterMatt87 Год назад +4

    😂 You've just clean thème NOT RESHARPENED

  • @johnhall8455
    @johnhall8455 Год назад +2

    Cleaning yes…sharpening…definitely not..🙄

  • @Rowels_Darling
    @Rowels_Darling Год назад +2

    When you say: _"This one is pretty bad...not nearly as bad"_ why do you suddenly slip into 1980s "valley girl" UPspeak? It's bellittling for an adult who should know better. It's insulting to your audience. KNOW WHAT you're going to say and have conviction when you say it - otherwise it doesn't need to be said.