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» The Letterville BullBoard » Tips & Tricks » How to: Sharpen A Squeegee

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Author Topic: How to: Sharpen A Squeegee
ScooterX
Resident


Member # 2023

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Here's something I came up with to help people with nicked squeegees. Please let me know if I've made any factual errors, or if the picture doesn't appear well on your monitor. (I saved it as .gif on a Mac).

As far as I know, this trick only works with 3M Gold squeegees. (I've seen other gold sqeegees that are only gold in color, not in quality). I hope a few people find this helpful.

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[ January 26, 2009, 09:03 PM: Message edited by: Barb. Shortreed ]

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:: Scooter Marriner ::
:: Coyote Signs ::
:: Oakland, CA ::
:: still a beginner ::
::

Posts: 1356 | From: Oakland (and San Francisco) | Registered: Mar 2001  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
Mike Berry
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Member # 2604

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Sandpaper (fine) works great on all colors & brands. But thats a good tip too! Thanks!!

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Mike Berry
New England

Posts: 534 | From: New England | Registered: Jan 2002  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
Bob Stephens
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Member # 858

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I've been doing it this way for quite some time now. And this doesnt only work with 3M. I only use the hard white el cheapo brand. Alway slicker than frogs hair.

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Bob Stephens
Skywatch Signs
Zephyrhills, FL

www.skywatchsigns.com
www.skywatchgallery.com

Posts: 2481 | From: Zephyrhills, Florida | Registered: Jun 1999  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
Stevo Chartrand
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Member # 2094

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Yup that's how I've always done it.
Good tip!

Stevo

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Stevo Design
Illustration Logos Sign Design Clip Art
www.stevo-design.com

Posts: 1680 | From: Edmonton Ab Canada EH! | Registered: May 2001  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
Jim Horton
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Member # 4271

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Thanks, thats a big help. But my gold (colored) 3m sqeegee only has two humps. Did I get a newer model or did I not get what I ordered?

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Jim Horton
Cool Signs & Grafix
Rochester, Indiana

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Frank Magoo
Resident


Member # 3950

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I have used cardboard to stroup my squeeges to finish edge, just like honing a knife blade, it works real well. Sanding always produced little plastic nits on edge and that's not acceptable. My two cents....

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Frank Magoo,
Magoo's-Las Vegas; fmagoo@netzero.com
"the only easy day was yesterday"

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ScooterX
Resident


Member # 2023

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Jim,
I have one that has two humps and one with four (gee, this sounds like a camel/dromedary thing). It doesn't matter - its not the groove between the hump, it the crux where the hump meets the flat. even if you only had ONE hump it would work. or halfahump...

Frank,
this is different than stropping (a back-and-forth action perpendicular to the blade used to remove a "wire edge" from sharp blades). Something about the forward-back removes a bit of material but also smoothes down the whole edge.
Both probably work, but I don't want to confuse people and have them try to strop using two squeegees.

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:: Scooter Marriner ::
:: Coyote Signs ::
:: Oakland, CA ::
:: still a beginner ::
::

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ScooterX
Resident


Member # 2023

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Oh, and I didn't want anybody to think I had "invented" this method. I was just trying to illustrate it for people who have heard about it, but didn't quite get the "how". Somebody at a meet showed me (maybe Al Checca from Latrobe, PA?), so I'm just passing it along. [FYI]

--------------------
:: Scooter Marriner ::
:: Coyote Signs ::
:: Oakland, CA ::
:: still a beginner ::
::

Posts: 1356 | From: Oakland (and San Francisco) | Registered: Mar 2001  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
   

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