Thursday 15 August 2013

The Importance Of Cutting Tool Sharpening

Cutting tool sharpening can be done on the premises or shipped out to a firm that specializes it this service. Cutting tool sharpening is done when the cutting tool becomes too dull to perform the job it is intended for. Cutting tool sharpening is cheaper than reconditioning the cutting tool and may be more economical then the more intensive reconditioning if the cutting tool is used for high tolerance cuts. For example, when you are using the cutting tool for the purpose of making smaller portions of stock for further machining.

If your cutting tool becomes dull, it also becomes dangerous to use anymore. This is when cutting tool sharpening is called for. Dull cutting tools will not cut your material properly and may bind up in the material. If it binds up in the material you are cutting, the possibility of the cutting tool breaking and injuring your operator becomes a real hazard and should be prevented at any cost. A little preventive medicine of sharpening the cutting tool may save your workers and you time and money. Cutting tool sharpening is definitely less expensive than purchasing new cutting tools every time your cutting tool grows dull.

Cutting tools are precision made instruments designed to make precision cuts on material to manufacture parts with specified tolerances. These parts will have tolerances that vary, depending on the size of the space they are supposed to fit. For low tolerance parts, it is important that your cutter be of a precise shape and sharpness to make the cuts needed. For higher tolerances, such precision is not as critical and simply sharpening the tool may be more economical than reconditioning it every time it grows dull. An example of this would be a table saw devoted to ripping stock into long strips for further manufacturing. The saw blade could be sharpened every time it grows dull until it will not take sharpening anymore. At that point, it is more economical to replace the saw blade rather than attempting to sharpen it again.

Machines for cutting tool sharpening are relatively inexpensive and will make a useful addition to a machine shop that does a lot of simple parts where tolerances are high and sharpening cutting tools is more economical than reconditioning. When you are sharpening cutting tools on a daily basis, it would be more productive to train a worker to do your sharpening for you than shipping the cutting tools to a specialty shop. Cutting tool sharpening is a fairly simple and rather straightforward operation for many cutters. Simply line up the cutter at the proper angle and grind off a small portion to regain the sharp edge the cutting tool had when you purchased it. Machines that perform cutting tool sharpening are rather small compared to other types of machining equipment and will not take an enormous amount of space in your workshop. So when considering your cutting tool sharpening needs, take into account all the factors of how the cutting tool is being used before making a decision on which avenue to take regarding sending the cutting tool to a specialist or doing the work yourself.

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