swagman
Established Member
CHOOSING THE CORRECT SIZE OF FILE FOR YOUR SAW:
The most common advice given for choosing a file to use on a particular saw is to select one whose face is twice as wide as the edge of the tooth being filed.
Implicit in this rule of thumb is the assumption that a file wears evenly over its faces. In my experience, it does not. Rather, the corners of the file dull or fail first, even while there is still life left in the faces of the file. Rotating the file to a fresh corner restores the cutting ability, even though a portion of the face that was previously used is asked to continue cutting. This overlap allows one file to work for several different tooth pitches.
http://www.blackburntools.com/blog/conc ... w-selling/
I am in total agreement with Isaac;
My preference is to work within the range of 1/2 - 3/4s of the files flat face width, to gullet dept.
Stewie;
The most common advice given for choosing a file to use on a particular saw is to select one whose face is twice as wide as the edge of the tooth being filed.
Implicit in this rule of thumb is the assumption that a file wears evenly over its faces. In my experience, it does not. Rather, the corners of the file dull or fail first, even while there is still life left in the faces of the file. Rotating the file to a fresh corner restores the cutting ability, even though a portion of the face that was previously used is asked to continue cutting. This overlap allows one file to work for several different tooth pitches.
http://www.blackburntools.com/blog/conc ... w-selling/
I am in total agreement with Isaac;
My preference is to work within the range of 1/2 - 3/4s of the files flat face width, to gullet dept.
Stewie;