RockyAussie Posted October 18, 2016 Report Posted October 18, 2016 From my experience I find that it is best to repeat hit a couple of times moving the knife and leather between hits to avoid any missus. This I do on tassels mostly and I don't know if I would try 20" long fringes in any hurry. (no ejection rubbers either I should add). Wild Harry - Australian made leather goodsYouTube Channel Instagram
Mark842 Posted October 18, 2016 Report Posted October 18, 2016 It works well. I was going to have the die made to cut two at once but Heather over there at Texas Custom Die warned me off..too much cutting edge. I hit it 2 times moving the swing arm from side to side. That will cut the design from the hide. I can then pick up the die with the leather still in it and move it a little bit on the board and hit it again and it's perfect. Sounds like a hassle compared to my one shot wonders but I have it down to about 20 seconds a unit. Slightly better than 20 minutes a unit by hand with a Tandy table top fringe cutter that was less than accurate. Took my average work day from 8-9 hours to about 2 hours without having to hire another employee. 2 hours ago, RockyAussie said: From my experience I find that it is best to repeat hit a couple of times moving the knife and leather between hits to avoid any missus. This I do on tassels mostly and I don't know if I would try 20" long fringes in any hurry. (no ejection rubbers either I should add). i just have ejection rubbers on the body, not on the fringe. I can just grab the top edge and all the fringe pulls right out. This is with 7-8 ounce oil tanned. Not sure how it would work with a veg tanned. Probably be hell to get the fringe out.
bikermutt07 Posted October 18, 2016 Report Posted October 18, 2016 I'm curious to see this massive die or a pic of the item, if you don't mind. I'm not paying 80 bucks for a belt!!! It's a strip of leather. How hard could it be? 4 years and 3 grand later.... I have a belt I can finally live with. Stitching is like gravy, it's only great if you make it every day. From Texas but in Bossier City, Louisiana.
Mark842 Posted October 18, 2016 Report Posted October 18, 2016 8 hours ago, bikermutt07 said: I'm curious to see this massive die or a pic of the item, if you don't mind. Not good at this picture stuff. Had to reduce the size to get it to fit. Hopefully it is big enough to see...
bikermutt07 Posted October 19, 2016 Report Posted October 19, 2016 6 minutes ago, Mark842 said: Not good at this picture stuff. Had to reduce the size to get it to fit. Hopefully it is big enough to see... Thanks. Is it something for saddles? I'm not paying 80 bucks for a belt!!! It's a strip of leather. How hard could it be? 4 years and 3 grand later.... I have a belt I can finally live with. Stitching is like gravy, it's only great if you make it every day. From Texas but in Bossier City, Louisiana.
Mark842 Posted October 19, 2016 Report Posted October 19, 2016 Just now, bikermutt07 said: Thanks. Is it something for saddles? Nope, Motorcycle stuff.
bikermutt07 Posted October 19, 2016 Report Posted October 19, 2016 50 minutes ago, Mark842 said: Nope, Motorcycle stuff. Slaps forehead! I should have seen that. I've seen a thousand times. I'm not paying 80 bucks for a belt!!! It's a strip of leather. How hard could it be? 4 years and 3 grand later.... I have a belt I can finally live with. Stitching is like gravy, it's only great if you make it every day. From Texas but in Bossier City, Louisiana.
Members Big Sioux Saddlery Posted October 19, 2016 Members Report Posted October 19, 2016 Mark842 how big is your clicker? That is a lot of cutting surface!
RockyAussie Posted October 19, 2016 Report Posted October 19, 2016 Note: I have noticed in the past when doing long knives like this after a while they start to bow down a lot in the middle. I have made a practice of putting a sacrificial piece of hard veg on the 2 ends on top to help counteract it but a little build up weld on ends would be better if using a lot. If the bow goes too far the next thing is wanting to go sideways as well and you know what that means. Regards Brian Wild Harry - Australian made leather goodsYouTube Channel Instagram
Members Big Sioux Saddlery Posted October 19, 2016 Members Report Posted October 19, 2016 7 hours ago, RockyAussie said: Note: I have noticed in the past when doing long knives like this after a while they start to bow down a lot in the middle. I have made a practice of putting a sacrificial piece of hard veg on the 2 ends on top to help counteract it but a little build up weld on ends would be better if using a lot. If the bow goes too far the next thing is wanting to go sideways as well and you know what that means. Regards Brian I always wondered if long dies that get warped that way (bow down in the center) get that way from people hitting them in the center first. On my long dies that are too long to do in one hit, I start from one end, then hit the other end, and then the center if two hits weren't enough. I think I only have one die that I need to do that with, and it was warped when I got it, even though it had seen very little use.
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