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US Patent: 91,271
Recutting Files
Patentee:
Xiste Robert (exact or similar names) - Worcester, Worcester County, MA

USPTO Classifications:
76/24.5

Tool Categories:
industrial tools : files
metalworking tools : files

Assignees:
None

Manufacturer:
Not known to have been produced

Witnesses:
Thomas H. Dodge
George H. Miller

Patent Dates:
Granted: Jun. 15, 1869

Patent Pictures:
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Description:
Thomas H. Dodge, patent attorney

The nature of my invention consists in a new and improved mode of renewing old and worn files so that they will be as good, or nearly as good for use as newly cut files.

In the drawings:

A is a box, which may be made of any convenient size for receiving the files to be renewed.

The files, B, are to be placed upon supporting blocks, or projections, and I prefer to place them on their sides, as shown in the drawings. The file-box may be made large enough to hold any desired number. Only one layer or thickness of files should be placed in the file-box at a time. After the file, or files have been placed in the box as stated, hot water is turned in, until the water slightly covers the files, after which a compound, or mixture composed of,-say, equal parts of ground or broken borax and blue vitriol, is sifted over the top of the file, or files, until the upper side, is slightly covered; after which oil of vitriol is turned on to the upper side of the file, from end to end, until ebullition takes place, after which the file, or files are allowed to remain from fifteen to thirty minutes, according to the size of the serrations of the file. After the file has remained in the bath a sufficient length of time, it is removed, and washed in water, a fine wire brush being used to clean the serrations. The file is now covered with some oily substance, such as kerosene-oil, to prevent its rusting. By-the above mode of treating old or much-worn files, the serrations are rendered as good for filing as newly-cut serrations, and old files, so treated, have proved on trial better than recut files. It will be understood that three-cornered and other shaped files may be treated in the same way.

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