Just when I needed it most, to rescribe the fuse of my BV P.212, I dropped my beautiful BareMetal Foil scriber on a concrete floor and ruined the tip. [banghead]
Does anyone know if there is a way for me to resharpen it, and get back that fine little cutting curl on the end? Can I send it back to BareMetal and have it sharpened, or do I just have to suck it up and buy a new one?
Hey Stinger, I just sharpened 4 that I got at a car show. They weren’t very sharp even new, so I used my Dremel with a sanding drum attached and gently sanded the end till it was sharp. Hope this helps
I seem to recall hearing you can use the wetstones that were designed for sharpening fish hooks (they have sort of a curved/concave surface) to sharpen up the tip on a scribe, but it would also seem to me that the amount of repairing you could do would be limited.
A fine grit whetstone is a good investment; I use mine for sharpening tool blanks, small drill bits and the occasional nick or tip damage on airbrush needles. In a pinch, you could use a piece of fine wet/dry sandpaper on a piece of glass with a small drop of light oil for lubrication.
getting back on topic, assuming that damage to the tip of the scriber isnt too bad, it would not be difficult to sharpen the tip to a nice fine point. bearing in mind that for a really sharp tip you need to use the same technique for sanding fuselage seams, that is coarse to fine grade sharpening stones. you cant put a very sharp point onto your scriber with 400 grade sandpaper. well not easily anyway.
Thanks for the suggestions guys. I think what I’ll do is buy another new one (so at least I have something to use), look at the tip under a magnifying glass to see how it looks new, and use that as an example of what to try to achieve in the sharpening process.
Will let you all know what the results are (but it will be a while).
Thanks again for all your advice, and keep’em cominmg!