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Printing templates on blades

When it comes down to it there is nothing better than manual tools for your Lock pick Set, whether they be retail, homebrew, macgyver style. DIY'ers look here.

Postby parapilot » 29 Nov 2006 12:32

looks great. Even if you make picks that are not shaped correct, still polish them up and you just have a bigger set :D

Next challange is the Majestic set!!! Im in the process of making a template for you all (looked to complex for me to make so i chose the lazy option - buy a set :D )
parapilot
 
Posts: 599
Joined: 30 Mar 2006 15:50
Location: Wirral, UK

anyone one tried using thermal transfer?

Postby unjust » 29 Nov 2006 17:50

i.e. print onto a wax transfer paper like for printing onto fabric and then ironing on the image?

it'd require etching in a trace of the image, but it'd be by far the most accurate image transfer idea i've heard yet.

doing something akin to a PCB home etch would even allow for -exact- outlines to be started and followed up with grinding.
unjust
 
Posts: 372
Joined: 7 Nov 2006 15:19
Location: Minneapolis MN

Re: anyone one tried using thermal transfer?

Postby Romstar » 29 Nov 2006 19:52

unjust wrote:i.e. print onto a wax transfer paper like for printing onto fabric and then ironing on the image?

it'd require etching in a trace of the image, but it'd be by far the most accurate image transfer idea i've heard yet.

doing something akin to a PCB home etch would even allow for -exact- outlines to be started and followed up with grinding.


Shush now boy. You be quiet now. :twisted:

Do you think I want everybody doing this?

There are too many smart people on here with too much time on their hands. :wink:

Romstar
Image
Romstar
 
Posts: 2823
Joined: 18 Apr 2004 3:13
Location: Nova Scotia, Canada

arf!

Postby unjust » 30 Nov 2006 14:33

(which would explain the metal fragments all over the living room from me and a dremel and some hacksaw blades. fortunately it warmed up a bit over thanksgiving weekend and i moved outdoors. incidentally contact cement makes a great thermal test compound, when the metal gets close to tempering issues it'll delaminate the paper.... which means you need to apply a new stencil.... although starch based glue does transfer heat well so that the paper discoulors at ~425F and accomplishes the same thing, but you cna't quench, so a few strokes on each pick and doing one after another is necessary)

so the next question is obviously the use of photo resist/devoloped silk screen templates to apply a resist and etch or electroplate a pattern on.

of course a transparency plastic stencil with a spread wax resist would generate a comperable resist, but may not render as accurately long term, but would be a stronger resist, possibly capable of partial depth etching to make grinding faster and less hot.

now, who's got a laser cutter for me to play with.... (and some free time for me)
unjust
 
Posts: 372
Joined: 7 Nov 2006 15:19
Location: Minneapolis MN

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