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harding street cleaner bristles

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.

harding street cleaner bristles

Postby ghostryder » 22 Sep 2012 19:26

i got the chance to own a set of picks a few years ago and while still in possesion of these picks,i made a home made half diamond pick. i used the purchased set as a template. the pick i made was down right out standing considering that i was just a fresh, out of the box beginer and had no clue as to what i was doing, not to mention, why i was doing it. i have had a few years to consider these thing, and found that as a hobby, it can be real relaxing and enjoyable. now , to my question: using street cleaner bristles, i would like to make my picks last a little longer. should i temper the metal after i finish grinding? ill be using a dremel to do the grinding. thanks
ghostryder
 
Posts: 2
Joined: 12 Aug 2012 19:16

Re: harding street cleaner bristles

Postby Josh66 » 22 Sep 2012 19:44

As long as you don't get it too hot while you're grinding (quench frequently), heat treating shouldn't really be necessary.
Josh66
 
Posts: 205
Joined: 15 Jan 2012 20:31
Location: Columbus, Ohio

Re: harding street cleaner bristles

Postby raimundo » 23 Sep 2012 9:51

hardening is easy, and bad for the picks, they are too brittle.
tempering is difficult, especially for a non metalurgist, kind of you take what you can get.
to set a bend after it is in shaped, 30 seconds or less over a bic lighter wil blue the outside of the little piece of metal, and reset the metal 'memory' so it maintains the new shape a little better, no need to do anything to the straight shafts and pick tips, and its best not to try because you could have a shaft of varying temper, with one area hard and another not so hard and therefore forming a place where flex and bend will concentrate.
Wake up and smell the Kafka!!!
raimundo
 
Posts: 7130
Joined: 21 Apr 2004 9:02
Location: Minnneapolis

Re: harding street cleaner bristles

Postby ghostryder » 23 Sep 2012 16:00

thank you, i will stop concerning myself with this "non-issue."
ghostryder
 
Posts: 2
Joined: 12 Aug 2012 19:16

Re: harding street cleaner bristles

Postby blate » 6 Oct 2012 19:12

If you can manage not to burn the metal while grinding it, you can take advantage of the manufacturer's superior heat treatment and avoid the perils of attempting the same at home.

A couple tips, based on my own experience:

A. Keep the work wet. If there is liquid water on the workpiece, it's not overheated. When in doubt, quench.
B. If the metal is hot enough to burn your fingers, it's too hot. Add water. And pain is an efficient teacher :)
C. The thinner the area you're working on, the more careful you want to be... there is less thermal mass to suck up the heat and buggering the temper in thin spots is a recipe for premature failure.
D. When using an abrasive wheel/emery wheel for rough-cutting, placing a few layers of wet rags underneath the work will pretty much avoid overheating. Sandwiching the work between two pieces of (sacrificial) aluminum, if it doesn't clog up your cutter, is also a good trick when grinding.
E. Use gentle pressure and let the tool do the work.
F. Perform final shaping with emery cloth or sanding bits. They cut more slowly (and so are easier to control) and reduce heating.
G. Finally, make sure that the abrasives and cutting bits you're using are designed for use on hardened ferrous metals. IIRC, you're looking for tungsten carbide instead of aluminum carbide... but read the packaging to be sure.

Be safe and have fun. And remember: sharp bits of metal + eyeball = pain and possible blindness.
blate
 
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Joined: 24 Aug 2012 20:10


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