EZE-LAP EZLPACK-BRK Set affilatore diamantato sintetico

Brand:EZE-LAP

3.6/5

45.78

Paese di origine: Stati Uniti. Peso della confezione: 0,068 chilogrammi. Costruito per prestazioni e durata. Dimensioni della confezione: 21.082 H x 0.508 L x 12.192 W (centimetri).

Paese di origine: Stati Uniti. Peso della confezione: 0,068 chilogrammi. Costruito per prestazioni e durata. Dimensioni della confezione: 21.082 H x 0.508 L x 12.192 W (centimetri).
Brand EZE-LAP
Color asst
Grit Type Fine,Fine Fine,Medium Grit,Super
Item Weight 0.1 Pounds
Material Synthetic
Product Dimensions 5"L x 5"W x 5"H

3.6

8 Review
5 Star
70
4 Star
19
3 Star
6
2 Star
3
1 Star
2

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Scritto da: Thomas
These fit in tight places
These fit in tight places. Work well for blender and food processor blades. I'm taking off a star because good golly, paying this price for a few square inches of material is a bit much.
Scritto da: k_zyklus
Excellent diamond hones.
I'm a machinist and have been using these (mainly on carbide tooling) for at least 25 years, and they work extremely well. They are cheap enough, durable, do a good job, easy to hold if you have meat hooks like me... what's not to like? I bought these as replacements for older ones that are wearing out, but remember, "wearing out" really just means that they are a finer grit now. One nice feature about these is that the handle is about .16" thick, starts to taper down slowly at about 1.25" length, and at about .1" takes a 30ish degree angle down to the .025" thick diamond medium/metal base that just barely hangs over the plastic handle by about .01", which means you can get into really tight areas that you simply can't with a wood mounted diamond hone. I've even machined the plastic handle away on the back side of the tip so there is about .05" of .025" thick medium. I've used them under microscopes, I've used them on knives, I've used them to relieve diamond tools (fine grade) and burnish diamond tools (20 year old fine grade, probably "ultra fine" now). The design hasn't changed, from what I can tell, in decades so I always know what I'm getting, and it is made in USA. Support US manufacturing, please! And now this set comes in a plastic pouch to organize and protect them; that is just icing on the cake! If you want some versatile, no frills, well made diamond hones at a reasonable price, take it from someone who knows... buy a set.
Scritto da: Marco
No dull knives
Use it to sharpen scissors and shorter blade knives. Use it to take out bigger nicks in my kitchen knives before I use the finer diamond.
Scritto da: Harold Vordos
A great value
A set of diamond hones was purchased on the recommendation of a trusted and knowledgeable friend. Shipment was rapid and performance, thus far, has been beyond my expectations. I'm used to using India stones for providing a keen edge on cutting tools. Diamond has been so much faster. I recommend these hones highly.
Scritto da: Edna Tucker
Great product!
My first experience with this brand. The EZE-LAP file is a great and handy tool for sharpening garden tools. The design gives great control over sharpening without being heavy or awkward. Technically, I think the "diamond metal" gives a clean and sharp blade on your tools.
Scritto da: R. G.
Useful size, but wears fast and is flexable and not really flat.
Their size is really handy, I use them to sharpen some Chinese router bits and these hones made them as good as new or better. Now for the cons - 1. They are not flat. If you trying to sharpen an important or expensive tool, do not use these. You can not trust the flatness. The diamond coating is on a piece of sheet metal about as thick as the wall of a coke can. Then the sheet metal is affixed to the plastic paddle, but the sheet metal bends to the shape of the plastic. Ideally the diamond coating would be on a 1/16" or 3/32" (or even 1/8") sheet metal. That would have been enough to resist the plastic's shape. Also, the sheet metal is so thin it looks like most of the corners have slight damage. The corners look slightly rounded over or bent. They might have been bent by handling damage at the factory. If you were to drop them, the corners would easily bend. 2. The diamond coating appears to wear VERY quickly. I sharpened two router bits and at first glance it looks like I wore the coating off of the edge of the hones. It shocked me that it changed after two bits. I don't doubt that there are still diamonds there, but if feels much smoother. I also wonder if I wear the edges of the hone with 4-6 router bit sharpenings and then I try to use the whole surface on something larger, it will cause an uneven surface. If you regularly use these expect them to wear fast. 3. Minor point but worth mentioning. The diamond coating of the medium hone had a slight buildup of the coating on the edges of the hone. Because the diamond surface wears so fast, see #2 above, the buildup wore down and the raised lip wasn't noticeable. Try wearing down the lip of diamond coating on a larger, less important tool, like a chisel. Summary - If at all possible, use the credit card size diamond sharpeners. I have a pair from this company and they are flatter and made from a decently thick (durable) piece of metal. The surface wears just as fast, but what can you do.
Scritto da: Carlgo
Good for typical projects
Nothing fancy here, and the price reflects that. Just diamond crinkles sprinkled on some material which is then glued to the handle. But it works and you have the three grits to choose from. I successfully sharpened a few knives and tools and while the results would not pass the electron microscope test for perfect smoothness, it is good enough for most tasks. People complain that the diamonds do not last, but I have had several quite expensive diamond files and all of them are pretty much gone (or I wouldn't be buying new ones). None of them last, although maybe some hideously expensive super industrial ones might. The trick to using the cheapest or most expensive ones is to apply virtually no pressure. Barely touch the file to the object. That is barely as in hardly touching. More than that is too much. The very lightest touch works just as well as trying to apply pressure. Swipe the file a couple of times, check you work under a bright light, keep doing that and soon you will be done and the file will seem untouched. Everyone needs a diamond file around and this is probably the cheapest one that actually works. Made in the US, amazingly. I thought the diamonds could have been more evenly applied, all being at the same height, so I took off a star. Still good though.
Scritto da: Kindle Customer
Need a good edge? Right here!
I'm accustomed to using several grits, from 180 to 6000 on my cutting tools. Got a good deal on this set of 3 and I won't go back. Easy to shape the edge and quick to bring it to burr. I don't waste time on 4 interim steps I don't really need, and still get the edge I want on my tools.

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