KevinCunningham
Member
- Joined
- Feb 20, 2022
- Messages
- 74
Howdy
I was referred to Centennial carbide and specifically their ultra-grain blanks by another engraver. He let me try his setup which worked great- he buys their 1/16” round stock and uses the GRS collet system so once a graver is locked into a collet it can be indexed repeatably for sharpening.
Well I am using a Lindsay classic- I like the 901 but I’m not ready to invest right now. My handpiece takes 3/32” square blanks and I sharpen all my different point shapes on a GRS grinder with the oldschool dual angle tool post that can repeatably clamp square shank gravers really well.
So I figured maybe I’d get 1/16” rounds in their ultra grain and figure it out, possibly even braze them into 3/32” 1/64”wall brass square tube for repeatable sharpening. But the didn’t have ultra grain in that size- it would be a special order. So if I was making a special order why not just get 3/32” square stock in the first place right?
I’ve done a lot of metal work and fabrication and in my experience metal is sold by actual size, sometimes for extra $ with a smaller +- tolerance, not like wood where a 2”x4” is actually much smaller. But when my custom order finally comes all the blanks are .113” +- about .0015, which is bigger than 7/64” and approaching 1/8”! 20% too big to fit in my handpiece.
I contacted Centennial and they said oversize is industry standard. Since I’m not a professional carbide tool manufacturer I have to take their word for it. I asked if I ordered 1/16” square next time what actual size could I expect but haven’t heard back yet.
I made a sharpie mark for how much shank I’d need on a roughing diamond wheel and figured out that grinding 1 minute 45 seconds on one face, then 1 minute 35 seconds on the next in my dual angle fixture gets me a shank that will load into my handpiece. My old Lindsay slotted collet that bolts onto his templates is a handy go/nogo gauge. what a dusty boring pain in the butt. I can do 10 in about an hour but then I still have to clearance and profile them before I can even polish & sharpen them…
Anybody else have this experience? It still beats buying Steve’s (really nice) blanks at $20 a pop but I’m really learning the hard way on this one.
In this pic is a Centennial 3/32 blank along with one of Steve’s actual 3/32” blanks- you can see the size difference.
I was referred to Centennial carbide and specifically their ultra-grain blanks by another engraver. He let me try his setup which worked great- he buys their 1/16” round stock and uses the GRS collet system so once a graver is locked into a collet it can be indexed repeatably for sharpening.
Well I am using a Lindsay classic- I like the 901 but I’m not ready to invest right now. My handpiece takes 3/32” square blanks and I sharpen all my different point shapes on a GRS grinder with the oldschool dual angle tool post that can repeatably clamp square shank gravers really well.
So I figured maybe I’d get 1/16” rounds in their ultra grain and figure it out, possibly even braze them into 3/32” 1/64”wall brass square tube for repeatable sharpening. But the didn’t have ultra grain in that size- it would be a special order. So if I was making a special order why not just get 3/32” square stock in the first place right?
I’ve done a lot of metal work and fabrication and in my experience metal is sold by actual size, sometimes for extra $ with a smaller +- tolerance, not like wood where a 2”x4” is actually much smaller. But when my custom order finally comes all the blanks are .113” +- about .0015, which is bigger than 7/64” and approaching 1/8”! 20% too big to fit in my handpiece.
I contacted Centennial and they said oversize is industry standard. Since I’m not a professional carbide tool manufacturer I have to take their word for it. I asked if I ordered 1/16” square next time what actual size could I expect but haven’t heard back yet.
I made a sharpie mark for how much shank I’d need on a roughing diamond wheel and figured out that grinding 1 minute 45 seconds on one face, then 1 minute 35 seconds on the next in my dual angle fixture gets me a shank that will load into my handpiece. My old Lindsay slotted collet that bolts onto his templates is a handy go/nogo gauge. what a dusty boring pain in the butt. I can do 10 in about an hour but then I still have to clearance and profile them before I can even polish & sharpen them…
Anybody else have this experience? It still beats buying Steve’s (really nice) blanks at $20 a pop but I’m really learning the hard way on this one.
In this pic is a Centennial 3/32 blank along with one of Steve’s actual 3/32” blanks- you can see the size difference.