Files and rasps have three distinguishing features: 1. Their length, which is always measured exclusively of their tangs. 2. Their cut, which relates not only to the character, but also to the relative degree of coarseness of the teeth. 3. Their kind or name, which has reference to the shape or style. In general, the length of files bears no fixed proportion to either their width or thickness, even though of the same kind. The tang is the spiked-shaped portion of the file prepared for the reception of a handle, and in size and shape should always be proportioned to the size of the file and to the work to be performed. The heel is that part of the file to which the tang is affixed.

Of the cut of files we may say that it consists of three distinct forms; viz.: “single cut,” “double cut” and “rasp,” which have different degrees of coarseness, designated by terms as follows viz.:—

Single-cut.Double-cut.Rasp.
RoughCoarseCoarse
CoarseBastardBastard
BastardSecond-cutSecond-cut
Second-cutSmoothSmooth
SmoothDead-smooth

Fig. 2204.

Fig. 2205.

The terms “rough,” “coarse,” “bastard,” “second-cut,” “smooth” and “dead-smooth,” have reference only to the coarseness of the teeth, while the terms “single-cut,” “double-cut” and “rasp” have special reference to the character of the teeth. The single-cut files (the coarser grades of which are sometimes called “floats”) are those in which the teeth are unbroken, the blanks having had a single course of chisel-cuts across their surface, arranged parallel to each other, but with a horizontal obliquity to the central line, varying from 5° to 20° in different files, according to requirements. Its several gradations of coarseness are designated by the terms “rough,” “coarse,” “bastard,” “second-cut” and “smooth.” The rough and coarse are adapted to files used upon soft metals, as lead, pewter, &c., and, to some extent, upon wood. The bastard and second-cut are applied principally upon files used to sharpen the thin edges of saw teeth, which from their nature are very destructive to the delicate points of double-cut files. The smooth is seldom applied upon other than the round files and the backs of the half-rounds. [Fig. 2204] represents the cut of single-cut rough files, their lengths ranging from 16 inches down to 4 inches. [Fig. 2205] shows the cut of the coarse, bastard, and second-cut, whose lengths also range from 16 to 4 inches, and whose cut is also finer as the length decreases. The float is used to some extent upon bone, horn, and ivory, but principally by plumbers and workers in lead, pewter, and similar soft metals. It will be seen that the teeth are nearly straight across the file and are very open, both of these features being essential requirements for files to be used on the above-named metals.