Burnishing card scrapers
#11
Before I go out and buy a burnishing tool for my card scrapers...has anyone used a knife sharpening steel to roll the edge?
Gary

Living under the radar, heading for "off the grid."

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#12
I use the shank of a solid carbide router bit.
Works good. Way harder than the scraper steel.
Good judgement is the product of experience.
Experience is the product of poor judgement.
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#13
glzahn,

I have not tried it, but the sharpening steels I have seen and used are sort of striated and this would be detrimental to the nearly microscopic burr needed on a card scraper. The qualities needed for a burnisher are hard and smooth. I have heard of all sorts of things for burnishing; backs of chisels, shanks of screw drivers, push rods from an engine etc. I suppose these would work, but the ideal burnisher is the shank of a solid carbide endmill or router bit.

This is a short video on sharpening a card scraper.

Rob Millard
www.americanfederalperiod.com
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xhVWhouezkI
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#14
My understanding is that not only does the burnisher have to be a harder material than the scraper, but also highly polished. All of the knife steels I have seen have a rough or serrated finish to them.
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#15
Thanks for the feedback. I'll try the shank on an old router bit to see how well that works.
Gary

Living under the radar, heading for "off the grid."

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#16
Back when I was in shop class I was taught to use a screwdriver. I still do it today and it works just as well today as it did then. File it square and hit it with a screw driver. No fancy tools needed.
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#17
I have an awl that I polished to burnish my scrapers. Works fine for me. Some of the videos I have seen on burnishing your scrapers seem to be more ritualistic than practical. I want to get back to finishing the project not jumping through imaginary hoops. Tom
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#18
You can also use the shank of a HSS or carbide drill bit. They actually work really well if they're shiny and not dinged up.

A knife-sharpening steel is a totally different tool. It has shallow grooves in it, and while it's harder than the knife's steel (or supposed to be), it's not nearly hard enough or smooth enough to serve as a burnisher.
Steve S.
------------------------------------------------------
Tradition cannot be inherited, and if you want it you must obtain it by great labour.
- T. S. Eliot

Tutorials and Build-Alongs at The Literary Workshop
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#19
Here is some info for you.

Here is the way I was taught years ago to sharpen a hand scraper.

The first step is to put the scraper in a vise and using a fine file, file the edge perfectly perpendicular to the sides. Only a couple of strokes should be necessary and this is normally only done on a brand new scraper or one in bad shape. Next, using a fine oil stone, hold the scraper flat on the stone and remove any burr and smooth the sides near the edge. Holding the scraper straight up on edge (90 degrees to the stone), hone the edge and then lightly remove the burr. There is a tendency for scrapers to dig into a soft waterstone so I use an inexpensive fine oil stone. 400 Wet & Dry sandpaper lubricated with light oil or WD40 would work fine.

Burnishing is the next step. After filing and being sure the edge is flat and 90 degrees to the sides, put the scraper flat down on, and slightly back (1/4") from the edge of your bench. Run your burnisher along the flat side of the scraper pressing it so the burnisher is tight at the edge. This starts causing the edge corner to extend. This is a step that burnisher jigs can not do. Now put the scraper in your vise extending up about an inch. With your burnisher, run it along the edge at 90 degrees from the sides. Take 2 or three not too heavy strokes. This causes the corner raised in the first step to be bent toward the sides of the scraper. Then tip your burnisher up slightly (10-15 degrees--really makes no difference) and take two continuous, firm strokes on each edge. That's it.

You will have to try scraping at various angles to find the "sweet spot." As the scraper becomes dull, go through the same three burnishing steps as above. You can burnish 10-20 times before stoning or filing is again required. It takes less time than changing sandpaper in a sander.

I greatly favor a real burnisher for two reasons. First, it is really hard metal. Second, it it highly polished. Both of these attributes mean that there is little chance of galling (or tearing metal from) the scraper edge. Galling makes for less than a smooth cut. The smoother the burnisher, the smoother the burr. Screwdriver shafts may or may not be hard enough and the chrome plating will eventually deteriorate. Drill bits are also variable in hardness. Using a valve stem from a car engine that has been highly polished is an alternative but, why not just get a burnisher?

Finally, you can control the aggressiveness of the scraper by the way you file/stone it and how you use the burnisher to make the burr. Stoneing with a fine stone after filing and then using lighter pressure on your burnisher will give you a less aggressive but finer cutting burr and a smoother finish. I have a thicker scraper that I sharpen to an aggressive cutting burr that I use for initial work (ie: ripple removal after jointing/planing) and then a set of thinner scrapers that I put a finer edge on for finish smoothing and cutting down and smoothing varnish finishes.

Finally, to prevent frustration, scrapers work best on hard woods. Using them on pine and other soft woods is generally unsuccessful.

For an excellent description with pictures get Bob Flexner's "Understanding Wood Finishing."
Howie.........
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#20
Any hard steel will work including the steel for kitchen knives.
I have 2 burnishers,the regular round one and an oval.I bought the oval at a farm market auction.Paid $1.00, I do not think the seller knew what it was for. My grandfather used a 1/2" machine drill,works as well as a store bought burnisher.My wifes grandfather used the back of a chisel.If it makes a small burr, then it is fine for the job.
mike
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