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Garden Shears   
Can someone advise me on the best way to sharpen shears please?
CJ
Date:Wed, 03 Aug 2005 17:53:14 GMT   Author:  

Re: Garden Shears   
The message <ew7Ie.31953$Hd4.18521@newsfe2-gui.ntli.net>
from "Colin Jacobs"  contains these words:


> Can someone advise me on the best way to sharpen shears please?


How handy are you?

If you feel you are up to drawfiling, with the cutting-edge upwards, put
one blade of the shears horizontally in a vice, and with a fine file
(preferably a 'first-cut' one) hold it by either end and incline it to
match the angle of the edge, draw it along the blade until the inside
edge is sharp.

The angle should be somewhere around 5 to 10 from the horizontal, the
higher side of the file towards the cutting edge.

Repeat with the other blade.

Do *NOT* try to file the faces between the blades.

The nut should be tight enough to keep the blades together when the
shears are fully open. The blades of good shears are usually slightly
bowed towards each-other.

Usually, to tighten them you use a spanner, then hammer the end of the
thread so that the nut can't loosen, though some have a locknut or a
screw-down device which holds the nut where you want it.

-- 
Rusty
Emus to: horrid dot squeak snailything zetnet point co full-stop uk
http://www.users.zetnet.co.uk/hi-fi/
Date:Wed, 3 Aug 2005 19:17:23 +0100   Author:  

Re: Garden Shears   
Thanks I am a model engineer but give me something large like this I fall to
pieces
Thanks for the tips,
CJ
"Jaques d'Alltrades"  wrote in message
news:313030303230303842F1184356@foobar.zetnet.co.uk...

> The message <ew7Ie.31953$Hd4.18521@newsfe2-gui.ntli.net>
> from "Colin Jacobs"  contains these words:
>
> > Can someone advise me on the best way to sharpen shears please?
>
> How handy are you?
>
> If you feel you are up to drawfiling, with the cutting-edge upwards, put
> one blade of the shears horizontally in a vice, and with a fine file
> (preferably a 'first-cut' one) hold it by either end and incline it to
> match the angle of the edge, draw it along the blade until the inside
> edge is sharp.
>
> The angle should be somewhere around 5 to 10 from the horizontal, the
> higher side of the file towards the cutting edge.
>
> Repeat with the other blade.
>
> Do *NOT* try to file the faces between the blades.
>
> The nut should be tight enough to keep the blades together when the
> shears are fully open. The blades of good shears are usually slightly
> bowed towards each-other.
>
> Usually, to tighten them you use a spanner, then hammer the end of the
> thread so that the nut can't loosen, though some have a locknut or a
> screw-down device which holds the nut where you want it.
>
> --
> Rusty
> Emus to: horrid dot squeak snailything zetnet point co full-stop uk
> http://www.users.zetnet.co.uk/hi-fi/
Date:Thu, 04 Aug 2005 16:12:43 GMT   Author: