Jump to content
kurtalderson

Rotary hole punch use & care

Recommended Posts

I just bought a CraftTool rotary hole punch thinking it would be the last one I ever buy. The darn thing requires so much pressure I'm all but done for the day after punching one of the #6 holes, the largest one. Never had any issues with the cheap ones I've been buying for years, other than they wear out after 5 years or so. If you have some tips on getting the CraftTool punch to work more easily, it would be appreciated!

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Place an extra piece of leather under the piece you are cutting your holes, to make the distance the hole punch has to travel a bit less. Never punch holes onto the bare anvil base.

 

 

Chas.

Edited by ChasCS

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

It needs help, they all do no matter where you buy them from new. Take each tube out and clean the inside. A little WD40 with some steel wool wound on a nail works pretty well. Then sharpen each tube. Take some magnification to the edge and see where it has no cutting edge and and work your way around. Keep checking as you work through the grits to make sure you are keeping the edge and bevel even. Take the bur off the inside edge of the tube. I like the fine abrasive cord for this. Have not had much luck with rouge or compound on a piece of string. You can use crocus around a nail or whatever is handy.  Replace the tube and make sure the punch end meets the anvil squarely all the way around. Now we will get into the part where things polarize.

I punch into paraffin repeatedly until I have a stack of it clearing the tube. I like beeswax for a lot of things - like thread. It is a stickier wax and paraffin is a slipperier wax. Paraffin will lubricate you punch tubes more and help the punchings clear inside the tube better than beeswax. 

I am going to politely disagree with Chas. I punch right onto the anvil base. The copper or soft brass base is pretty forgiving and with a sharp punch tuned to meet the anvil squarely, it works. Over time the punch will imprint into the anvil and no biggie there.  Some puse a piece of leather , some a piece of cutting mat, it is your choice, try both and see what is easier for you. You will notice most of of these old pros give a little twist as they punch - conciously or subconciously. That makes a bit of a slicing action that helps a lot and results in a smooth clean punch with minimal effort. 

Care of these punches - A little care goes a long way. If a punch starts to drag a bit, a light stropping helps a lot. A few old guys have shown me their "little secret tip". Take a piece of crocus and twist it around the end of the punch every so often, then the same inside on a nail. One guy took a saddle spike and made vertical "grit" grooves in it with sandpaper. He would lightly put it into the end of the punch and give a few twists to do the inside edge, A make shift butchers steel. Clean the tubes out when you are done using them by punching wax until the leathers clear. Corrosion inside the tube will make them drag or packup and make punching as hard as using a dull tube. 

 

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I definitely don't mind you correcting me, or sharing helpful suggestions. 

I have found punching directly into that base plate, will dull the hole punches faster than normal hole punching with a piece of leather below, whatever you are piercing.  But that bottom layer could be a piece plastic or even wood for that matter.

I was always taught to try and protect those punching tubes, but had never considered touching them up, or even resharpening them.

I have seen some videos, where the piece being pierced was being turned, while the hole punch was still engaged in the leather.

The paraffin sounds like a smart idea. I have never touched up my hole punches or lubed them for easier cutting.

I will have to look into both of your suggestions. Thanks for sharing your knowledge and experience here. ;-)

 

Chas

 

 

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.


×
×
  • Create New...