April
S M T W T F S
1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30
Who's Online Now
5 members (bushveld, Stanton Hillis, Kip, 2 invisible), 401 guests, and 7 robots.
Key: Admin, Global Mod, Mod
Forum Statistics
Forums10
Topics38,443
Posts544,796
Members14,405
Most Online1,258
Mar 29th, 2024
Thread Like Summary
Stanton Hillis
Total Likes: 1
Original Post (Thread Starter)
#615505 06/04/2022 1:52 PM
by 82nd Trooper
82nd Trooper
I have some gunsmith specials (American sxs and singles) I purchased with the intent of trying different wood finishes. Some of these guns need the checking cleaned up a little. All the checkering is present it just needs to be recut. I've seen the different checking sets with 60 and 90 degree cutters, veiners, multi-line cutters, and the different LPI sets. I do not plan on starting from a blank canvas and checker a new stock just recut the existing so any input with the minimum tool(s) I would most likely need.

I always for forward to informed answers from this site.

Thanks,
Scott
Liked Replies
#615521 Jun 4th a 09:33 PM
by Kutter
Kutter
Re-cutting old checkering can really eat up checkering tools/heads.
The old dirt & grit packed down in there and even sometimes what was used as a stock finish grain filler is just what you need to dull a nice sharp tool edge.

Most any checkering tool is expensive now and some nearly impossible to find.

'I find the Carbide single line tools are great for recutting old work. They can do the bulk of the recutting/deepening and working through all that old crud and finish that simply wears
out a nice new tool steel head very quickly.
Then to complete the job, go over it with regular spacer tools to finish it up and bring everything into nice straight alignment.

The Carbine single line tools will last a long long time. A good investment if you are going to be doing the work for a while.
I'm still using a couple I bought in the mid 90's. One is starting to feel just a little dull now.

The GunLine style checkering heads are nice as you can actually sharpen them once they get dull and get some more useful life out of them
If you sharpen them across the face of each tooth, they respond nicely. You can resharpen them quite a number of times that way.
You need a very thin diamond file to do the sharpening.
If you sharpen up and down the full side of the V on each side it will also sharpen the head, but not as efficiently as across the face of each tooth IMO.
Also you start to loose the geometry of the V shape as you take away material in each sharpening.
Not too bad with a single point cutter. But you start to mess up LPI sharpening a multi line cutter or a spacer in that manner.
1 member likes this

doublegunshop.com home | Welcome | Sponsors & Advertisers | DoubleGun Rack | Doublegun Book Rack

Order or request info | Other Useful Information

Updated every minute of everyday!


Copyright (c) 1993 - 2024 doublegunshop.com. All rights reserved. doublegunshop.com - Bloomfield, NY 14469. USA These materials are provided by doublegunshop.com as a service to its customers and may be used for informational purposes only. doublegunshop.com assumes no responsibility for errors or omissions in these materials. THESE MATERIALS ARE PROVIDED "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANT-ABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, OR NON-INFRINGEMENT. doublegunshop.com further does not warrant the accuracy or completeness of the information, text, graphics, links or other items contained within these materials. doublegunshop.com shall not be liable for any special, indirect, incidental, or consequential damages, including without limitation, lost revenues or lost profits, which may result from the use of these materials. doublegunshop.com may make changes to these materials, or to the products described therein, at any time without notice. doublegunshop.com makes no commitment to update the information contained herein. This is a public un-moderated forum participate at your own risk.

Note: The posting of Copyrighted material on this forum is prohibited without prior written consent of the Copyright holder. For specifics on Copyright Law and restrictions refer to: http://www.copyright.gov/laws/ - doublegunshop.com will not monitor nor will they be held liable for copyright violations presented on the BBS which is an open and un-moderated public forum.

Powered by UBB.threads™ PHP Forum Software 7.7.5
(Release build 20201027)
Responsive Width:

PHP: 7.0.33-0+deb9u11+hw1 Page Time: 0.512s Queries: 10 (0.499s) Memory: 0.7514 MB (Peak: 1.4336 MB) Data Comp: Off Server Time: 2024-04-19 01:36:46 UTC
Valid HTML 5 and Valid CSS