Has anyone tried any of the rotary blade sharpners that are available? I recently purchased a manual one that sharpens 45mm blades and it seems to work quite well, three or four sharpenings before I throwout the blade. I am looking to find one that will also do 60mm blades. Any thought or suggestions?
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I ordered a TrueCut Rotary Blade Sharpener quite a while ago. Haven't received it yet but it's a sharpener on a strip and you run your blade across it. Kinda pricey though. Look it up, maybe you would be interested in that.
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I haven't tried one.
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Those little sharpie thingeys are so expensive that I'm almost
to the point of doing what my husband used to do with his razor blades..put them under a pyramid! It actually seemed to sharpen them so that he could shave with them more often than usual. I'm going to try to visit one of the shops in a bigger town next week or so, Harbor Freight wasn't it? They're probably out of them, or have the prices up since they have become popular, but still cheaper than the usual rotary blades. Any comments about these blades? |
Originally Posted by virtualbernie
I ordered a TrueCut Rotary Blade Sharpener quite a while ago. Haven't received it yet but it's a sharpener on a strip and you run your blade across it. Kinda pricey though. Look it up, maybe you would be interested in that.
I wonder if my Grandpa's old leather belt sharpening trick might work on these? It worked for a long time with his long, wicked looking razor. |
I've not tried one, but I have heard they don't always work well..
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I have the TrueCut Rotary Blade Sharpener by Grace Co. It works better than any of the other sharpeners I've tried. It will keep the blade sharp but won't take out a nick in the blade. The way to use a sharpener is to not wait for the blade to get dull. Sharpen a sharp blade and it will stay sharp. I ordered a couple of the Sharpening Rulers that sharpen the blade as you cut. They are suppose to be very efficient in keeping the blade sharp too.
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I love the Harbor Freight Blades....they work well and when I start a new project, I don't feel bad about using a new one
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Diannw - what brand of rotary blade sharpener do you have? I have been wanting to get a sharpener, but am not sure which ones work well and which don't. I only use 45mm blades, so the brand that you already have might be just what I need.
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The one I got from Joann's is in a landfill- don't get that one!!
I currently overuse my blades, I know, stupid :D |
I second the Joanns in the landfill. That is where mine is to.
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You have pyramids in California??? Hmmm
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Originally Posted by Ramona Byrd
Those little sharpie thingeys are so expensive that I'm almost
to the point of doing what my husband used to do with his razor blades..put them under a pyramid! It actually seemed to sharpen them so that he could shave with them more often than usual. I'm going to try to visit one of the shops in a bigger town next week or so, Harbor Freight wasn't it? They're probably out of them, or have the prices up since they have become popular, but still cheaper than the usual rotary blades. Any comments about these blades? |
Originally Posted by BellaBoo
I have the TrueCut Rotary Blade Sharpener by Grace Co. It works better than any of the other sharpeners I've tried. It will keep the blade sharp but won't take out a nick in the blade. The way to use a sharpener is to not wait for the blade to get dull. Sharpen a sharp blade and it will stay sharp. I ordered a couple of the Sharpening Rulers that sharpen the blade as you cut. They are suppose to be very efficient in keeping the blade sharp too.
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I am using the Tri-Sharp, that I bought at Hancocks in Birm.Al. It only comes in one size and seems to take out the knicks. I bought it when they had a 50% sale on quilting notions so I think I paid about $7.50 for it.
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Originally Posted by patdesign
Originally Posted by BellaBoo
I have the TrueCut Rotary Blade Sharpener by Grace Co. It works better than any of the other sharpeners I've tried. It will keep the blade sharp but won't take out a nick in the blade. The way to use a sharpener is to not wait for the blade to get dull. Sharpen a sharp blade and it will stay sharp. I ordered a couple of the Sharpening Rulers that sharpen the blade as you cut. They are suppose to be very efficient in keeping the blade sharp too.
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I have been buying Olfa 45mm blades on Ebay. The first time I bought 20 blades; later I bought 25 blades and a new cutter. Both were under $35 including shipping.
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I used the Tri sharp (blue with sandpaper/diamond discs) so much that I wore out the discs. I then purchased the Orbitol sharpener ($37 Canadian, handles all sizes of blades). It too works well but you never get a blade a sharp as a new one. I figure on the first sharpening it is about 75% as good as new and lasts about 3/4's as long, second sharpening 50% and third sharpening 25%. Neither of these sharpeners will take out nicks but will make your blades last longer. The best bet may still be to stock up when blades are on sale. Dull blades make for miserable cutting and will damage your mat. Kleen Cut blades (an Olfa clone) regularly sell for $2.99 at Len's Mills and once in a while they are on for half price. That's when I buy a couple of dozen and then further extend this supply by sharpening each a couple of times.
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i haven't tried one but you can use whetstones for sharpening japanese knives.
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I change blades at first skip. My blades last a long time though because I run them through the Grace vertical sharpener before I use it and in between cuttings. Sharpen a sharp blade and it never gets dull.
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yes you are right
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Originally Posted by johnacostilla
(Post 8483190)
i haven't tried one but you can use whetstones for sharpening japanese knives.
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I've tried the Harbor Freight ones and hated them. Not sure if I bought a bad batch (bought 8 of them) or what, but they all had dull spots and wouldn't cut the fabric even if I went over it more than once. I order blades from the Quilting Twins when they have specials on them...never had a dull one.
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Many years ago I got one of the early ones, it was two disc things and you sort of sandpapered the blades.
I followed directions and tried it for a good test, maybe a year? It didn't do much for me and it resides in the drawer of unused notions (a darker place than the isle of misfit toys). I think it can help keep an edge, but it wasn't enough help if you ran over a pin. Pretty much it was I had to start each day/cutting session by sharpening and I just didn't want to do that. If I'm going to take the handle apart, I'm going to just put in a new blade. And then, almost immediately after I run over another pin! Hate that :( It took me awhile to adjust my thinking and that while maybe that single unit full priced blade replacement is rather expensive -- but it's a lot cheaper than my fabric and time. I now buy high quality blades in bulk+on sale. I try not to buy fabric or shop online, but when I put in orders for other things on Amazon, I check and see if there are any deals for things like blades or thread or whatever. |
Originally Posted by Iceblossom
(Post 8483327)
It took me awhile to adjust my thinking and that while maybe that single unit full priced blade replacement is rather expensive -- but it's a lot cheaper than my fabric and time. I now buy high quality blades in bulk+on sale. I try not to buy fabric or shop online, but when I put in orders for other things on Amazon, I check and see if there are any deals for things like blades or thread or whatever.
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I just buy the blades at JoAnn's. I try and get them in the multipacks and when on sale or when I have a coupon. Have a good supply now and haven't bought any for a while. Seems to be the most economical way to buy them, still pricey, and the often have the mulitpack ones locked up so have to ask. Depressing to think that sewer's will shoplift but they have had a big problem with the blades walking off.
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I think my current package was (3) 5-packs?? of Olfa name brand for around $40 including postage, but you gotta get the sales. Sometimes the fabric sites will have good deals as well, always check before you check out! Years ago and sometimes you still see them, Joann had super cheap cutters that I could buy on sale or with a coupon for just a couple of bucks.
While part of me balks at the idea, really -- $3-5 extra per queen quilt even is still cheap compared to the fabric at the $10-12/yard or time or even thread. One thing to watch for is if you have two blades stick together. No, they don't cut better than one, they cut worse! |
I've tried 3 of them that you place the blade into and then turn it; one was electric. Also tried the long flat one that you use your cutter and place the blade in a strip and roll it to and fro. That one didn't work either. Just spent a lot of money.
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The new TruCut sharpener looks pretty good.
I tried the hand-operated sharpener and thought it was worthless and the electric one I bought 6-8 years ago wasn't much better. I bought blades at Harbor Freight and thought they were great for the price, but not so hot when it came to actually cutting fabric on a cutting mat. :D Probably great for cutting carpet in a carpet cutter tool. I buy generic blades on eBay - they might not last as long as the name brands, but the difference seems slight to me, if any. I cut everything with my rotary cutters - quilting cotton, apparel knits, denim, canvas, cork leather/fabric, light leather, suede, heavy webbing, nylon zipper tape, heavy cardstock and template plastic. |
I have use the Harbor Freight blades for years and sharpened them with my manual sharpener for just as long. It is the price that has kept me using them. I have been using less of them as of late and have a good rotary cutter that came with a few blades when I got it some time ago. Having used Harbor Freight for so long I forgot what quality was all about. This change a few months ago over to Quilter Select has been sweet. Even with that I have been doing less cutting because of my Accuquilt cutter so the rotary cutter is getting less of a workout these days.
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Originally Posted by sewingpup
(Post 8483359)
I just buy the blades at JoAnn's. I try and get them in the multipacks and when on sale or when I have a coupon. Have a good supply now and haven't bought any for a while. Seems to be the most economical way to buy them, still pricey, and the often have the mulitpack ones locked up so have to ask. Depressing to think that sewer's will shoplift but they have had a big problem with the blades walking off.
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