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Subject: Re: Tooling care

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Message Thread:

Tooling care

9/21/18       
Scott

I was wondering what everyone is using for lubricating and cleaning your saw blades and shaper cutters?
I see all these products, just curious if any of them are any good?

9/21/18       #2: Tooling care ...
Karl E Brogger  Member

Website: http://www.sogncabinets.com

I just wait for the carbide guy to pick it up. Comes back clean and ground.

I don't bother with inserts anymore. Run them, then just replace

9/21/18       #3: Tooling care ...
MarkB Member

We do clean our saw blades occasionally with a soak in decanted lacquer thinner (we pour off our cleaning solvent and decant it in gallon cans and use it for cleaning). We scrub them down with a good stiff brush. Oddly a blade can act dull but just need a good cleaning. We've been able to reduce sharpening by 50% with cleaning.

Agree with Karl though, regular sharpening takes care of the bulk of it and in a critical application where you really rely on sharp tools the re-sharp is the best option as long as your sharpener does a solvent clean. One of our sharpeners only buffs and doesnt do any type of solvent soak/vibratory clean, so those we clean ourselves before we send them to him.

9/24/18       #4: Tooling care ...
Larry Schweitzer

Easy-off oven cleaner. Let it soak for a few minutes.

9/25/18       #5: Tooling care ...
Alex Member

Website: https://rangate.com

Hi Scott,

I work for Rangate (shaper cutters are our specialty), and we get this question fairly often. We recommend using powdered detergent designed for ultrasonic cleaners with our tools, which we also carry for convenience. Using the actual cleaner machine is common, but I don't think you lose out on anything by hand washing, it's just about time, not the actual clean you get.

Before you get something, make sure the cleaner you use is designed for the metal of the tool body. Steel and aluminum tools should get cleaned with different compounds. I linked the cleaners we carry for your reference. If you'd like to look over the MDS to help your research, send me a message and I can get that for you.

If you're cleaning insert cutters, I would take off all the knives/screw/gibs before soaking it. You can clean them individually and brush them down (stiff bristles are good, but don't use a wire brush).

Hope this helped.

Alex

Rangate Tool Cleaner

9/25/18       #6: Tooling care ...
Gary Balcom Member

Website: http://www.Atlantacabinet.com

Alex,

Are you putting the tool in an ultrasonic cleaner? seems like a neat idea.

9/25/18       #7: Tooling care ...
Alex Member

Website: https://rangate.com

Hi Gary,

Yes, you can put the tool right in the ultrasonic cleaner. We've found it's the easiest way to get a thorough clean on them. It's smart to take the inserts off before they go in and clean those up by hand with the same detergent to water ratio.

We have tools cycling in and out through our CutterShare program and that's our set policy to clean in between usages.

If you have any questions about the cleaning or what to use in it, feel free to send me an email or message.

9/25/18       #8: Tooling care ...
door shop guy

Oven cleaner...laquer thinner..NO thanks..not on my tooling. I use CMT bit and blade cleaner and it works great. Only clean when notice cut quality gone down. My tooling i look at as a lifetime investment.

 

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