DIYbanter

DIYbanter (https://www.diybanter.com/)
-   Woodworking (https://www.diybanter.com/woodworking/)
-   -   worth saving money on burnishers? (https://www.diybanter.com/woodworking/26386-worth-saving-money-burnishers.html)

Dave W January 17th 04 06:57 PM

worth saving money on burnishers?
 
An engine valve stem or a pushrod will burnish even the hardest scrapers!
Most engine rebuilders have buckets of them they would love to get rid of.
Dave
"RWS" wrote in message
news:RBfOb.74087$sv6.161375@attbi_s52...
Hi, I am self tought, and I want to learn how to sharpen a cabinet

scraper.
There is a Crown Burnisher at Highland for around 10.00...and Garrett has
them for over 20...Is it important to spend the extra money? Is burnisher
shape important? If so, which burnisher should I get? I have tried using a
screwdriver, and it doesn't do anything. Thanks. Robert





RWS January 17th 04 06:58 PM

worth saving money on burnishers?
 
Hi, I am self tought, and I want to learn how to sharpen a cabinet scraper.
There is a Crown Burnisher at Highland for around 10.00...and Garrett has
them for over 20...Is it important to spend the extra money? Is burnisher
shape important? If so, which burnisher should I get? I have tried using a
screwdriver, and it doesn't do anything. Thanks. Robert



Bridger January 17th 04 09:31 PM

worth saving money on burnishers?
 
On Sat, 17 Jan 2004 18:58:57 GMT, "RWS" wrote:

Hi, I am self tought, and I want to learn how to sharpen a cabinet scraper.
There is a Crown Burnisher at Highland for around 10.00...and Garrett has
them for over 20...Is it important to spend the extra money? Is burnisher
shape important? If so, which burnisher should I get? I have tried using a
screwdriver, and it doesn't do anything. Thanks. Robert



if a screwdriver doesn't do anything then neither will the one from
crown. it's probably your technique that needs to be worked on,
assuming that the screwdriver shank wasn't made of dead soft steel.
did the scraper cut off a shaving from the shank of the screwdriver
when you tried it?

a big factor is how well the scraper was prepared. I generally do it
like this:
if the edge is very bad, or it's a new scraper I'll shape it on the
grinder. from there I'll often work it a bit with a single cut mill
file. I lay the file down flat on the bench and using a scrap of wood
with a 90 degree edge as a guide I'll take a few strokes against the
file. what you're looking for is an edge that is cleanly squared off,
no rounding at all. if I'm sharpening for roughing work I'll go
straight from the file to the burnisher. If I need a finer edge than
that I'll stone the edge first. if you can, clamp the scraper up so
that the edge is well supported it's full length. any smooth metal rod
harder than the scraper will work fine- a screwdriver already has a
good handle on it. use a smooth stroke feeding the direction you want
the hook to go. I find that a drop of light oil on the burnisher
helps.
Bridger

Andy Dingley January 17th 04 11:19 PM

worth saving money on burnishers?
 
On Sat, 17 Jan 2004 18:58:57 GMT, "RWS" wrote:

Is it important to spend the extra money?


No. Although I'm no fan of Crown products, I can't see they'd get a
burnisher wrong.

Is burnisher shape important?


Not really.

If so, which burnisher should I get? I have tried using a
screwdriver, and it doesn't do anything.


I like to use a factory-made burnisher, because it has a handle on it.
Doesn't work any better, but it saves fingers.

Screwdrivers often don't work, being too soft. The top of a round file
works, but if you slip you can guge the scraper. Engine valves are
OK, but I'd take the trouble to put a handle on it. An engineer's
half-round scraper (a file with no teeth) is as good as any burnisher.

--
There's more than one way to skin a cat...

...but I still prefer the electric belt sander.

mike January 18th 04 01:05 AM

worth saving money on burnishers?
 
"RWS" wrote in message news:RBfOb.74087$sv6.161375@attbi_s52...
Hi, I am self tought, and I want to learn how to sharpen a cabinet scraper.
There is a Crown Burnisher at Highland for around 10.00...and Garrett has
them for over 20...Is it important to spend the extra money? Is burnisher
shape important? If so, which burnisher should I get? I have tried using a
screwdriver, and it doesn't do anything. Thanks. Robert


I have a round and an oval burnisher, both work fine. I have used a
1/2" twist drill in a pinch. Buy the $10.00 one, it'l work.

mike

Mike G January 18th 04 01:10 AM

worth saving money on burnishers?
 
I think it is

--
Mike G.

Heirloom Woods
www.heirloom-woods.net
"RWS" wrote in message
news:RBfOb.74087$sv6.161375@attbi_s52...
Hi, I am self tought, and I want to learn how to sharpen a cabinet

scraper.
There is a Crown Burnisher at Highland for around 10.00...and Garrett has
them for over 20...Is it important to spend the extra money? Is burnisher
shape important? If so, which burnisher should I get? I have tried using a
screwdriver, and it doesn't do anything. Thanks. Robert





Dick on the James January 18th 04 02:33 AM

worth saving money on burnishers?
 
You said There is a Crown Burnisher at Highland for around 10.00..

Crown = crap IMO. I bought one of their burnishers and the steel is
so soft that my antique Stanley scraper blade dug into it, scarring
the burnisher rod badly the first time I used it. I now use an old
file that I ground smooth, which is a little prep work but works very
nicely. Good luck!
Dick


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 10:16 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 DIYbanter