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I've never tried it. Intuitively, I would think a file would cause some tearout on the edges.
Still Learning,
Allan Hill
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I saw that tip too, and remember reacting...What!?
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I guess you could, but with a lot of care; not my intuitive, nor first, choice.
Credo Elvem ipsum etiam vivere
Non impediti ratione cogitationis
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If dovetails need trimming, a paring chisel is your friend.
Fair winds and following seas,
Jim Waldron
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The risk with a file or rasp is that you can round over the face. I have tried these tools, and the only way it can work is if you press the file/rasp against the face, and keep a finger against it as if a guide. I do not know how it was done in the article.
Regards from Perth
Derek
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A file would not be my first thought either.
Sand paper makes sense. Perhaps even an emery board?
Next time I do some dovetails I guess I can try sand paper.
In the past they either go together or I "tap em" a bit and then
they do.
Maybe I am just lucky?
Mark Singleton
Bene vivendo est optimum vindictae
The Laws of Physics do not care about your Politics - Me
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I mainly use chisels, but I do once in a blue moon, use a Grobet VulCrylic 4 way detail file if it is better suited to the problem / defect. Where I mainly use the file, is to round off the inside corners of the tails, when doing half blind dovetails.