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Thread: how do you make a burnisher?

  1. #1

    how do you make a burnisher?

    I would like to make a burnisher for sharpening my scrapers but I don't know how to do it. What should I use for the burnisher? what about a handle?

    I have read through this site about scrapers.
    http://www.brendlers.net/oldtools/scraping/scraper.htm
    It mentions using Wrist pins and lifters from an auto repair shop. What are wrist pins and lifters? (its obvious I'm not a car guy)
    What would I need to do to these in order to use them as a burnisher?

    Thanks,
    Stephen

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Dec 2003
    Location
    Laguna Beach , Ca.
    Posts
    7,201

    Burnisher

    Quote Originally Posted by Stephen Sebed
    I would like to make a burnisher for sharpening my scrapers but I don't know how to do it. What should I use for the burnisher? what about a handle?

    I have read through this site about scrapers.
    http://www.brendlers.net/oldtools/scraping/scraper.htm
    It mentions using Wrist pins and lifters from an auto repair shop. What are wrist pins and lifters? (its obvious I'm not a car guy)
    What would I need to do to these in order to use them as a burnisher?

    Thanks,
    Stephen
    Even the shaft of a screwdriver will work. That is what i used to use. I bought the plastic one from Lee Valley and it works good. You need to file first before you make the hook. You can get 4 edges on a scraper...and Sandvick are still the best!
    Mark

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Aug 2003
    Location
    extreme southeast Nebraska
    Posts
    3,113

    homemade burnisher

    Stephan, I use a dull solid carbide burr for a burnisher with the dull cutting end driven into a wooden file handle. Carbide is extremely hard and will not gald, I use one drop of light oil on burnisher as a lubricant. Dull carbide burrs can usually be obtained from a machine shop for nothing as when dull they are thrown into the scrap barrel.
    Jr.
    Hand tools are very modern- they are all cordless
    NORMAL is just a setting on the washing machine.
    Be who you are and say what you feel... because those that matter... don't mind...and those that mind...don't matter!
    By Hammer and Hand All Arts Do Stand

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Feb 2003
    Location
    Lafayette, IN
    Posts
    4,566
    Quote Originally Posted by Stephen Sebed
    It mentions using Wrist pins and lifters from an auto repair shop. What are wrist pins and lifters? (its obvious I'm not a car guy)
    What would I need to do to these in order to use them as a burnisher?

    Thanks,
    Stephen
    Wrist pins are what connect a piston to the arm (arm is connected to the shoulder, which connects it to the crankshaft). They allow the arm to pivot back and forth as the crankshaft turns, while the piston rides up and down in the cylinder. Lifters are attached to the valves (which allow the entry of the fuel-air mixture and the exit of exhaust, 2 or more per cylinder), and the lifters are actuated generally by either pushrods, or an overhead cam or two. Probably more than you ever wanted to know, eh?
    Jason

    "Don't get stuck on stupid." --Lt. Gen. Russel Honore


  5. #5
    I have several that gather dust...the back of a good paring chisel works just as well.
    “Perhaps then, you will say, ‘But where can one have a boat like that built today?’ And I will tell you that there are still some honest men who can sharpen a saw, plane, or adze...men (who) live and work in out of the way places, but that is lucky, for they can acquire materials for one third of city prices. Best, some of these gentlemen’s boatshops are in places where nothing but the occasional honk of a wild goose will distract them from their work.” -- L Francis Herreshoff

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