A round file should always be a little smaller at its greatest diameter than the hole in the work. Before inserting it in the hole it should be rotated in the fingers, and the eye cast along it, to select the part having the most belly, which may then be brought to bear on the required spot in the work, without filing any other place, and without filing away the edges at the ends of the hole. For very accurate work it is sometimes desirable to grind on a round file, a flat place forming a safe edge. So likewise a safe edge flat file requires grinding on its safe edge, because in cutting the teeth a burr is thrown over on the safe edge, rendering it capable of scoring the work when filing close up to a shoulder.

The work should be held as near down to the surface of the jaws of the vice as will allow the required amount of metal to be filed off without danger of the file teeth coming into contact with those jaws, and should be placed so that the filing operation when finished shall be as near as possible parallel with the top of the vice jaws. These jaws then serve somewhat as a guide to the filing operation, showing where the metal requires filing away.

For cutting steel that contains hard spots or places, a second-cut file is more effective than a rough or bastard file.

Rough files are more suitable for soft metals, the bastard cut being usually employed upon wrought iron, cast iron, and steel by the machinist. But in any case the edge of the file is employed to remove small spots that are excessively hard. The file should be clean and dry to cut hard places or spots, and used with short strokes under a heavy pressure, with a slow movement.

When a file has been used until its cutting edges have become too dull for use, it may be to some extent resharpened by immersion in acid solutions; but the degree of resharpening thus obtained has not proved sufficient to bring this process into general or ordinary application; hence, the files are either considered useless, or the teeth are ground off and new ones formed by recutting them.

A recut file is of course thinned by the process, but if properly done is nearly, if not quite, as serviceable as a new one, providing that in grinding out the old teeth the file be ground properly true to curve; but, unfortunately, this is rarely found to be the case.

An excellent method of resharpening files, and also of increasing the bite of new files (which is an especial advantage for brass work), is by the means of the sand blast. The process consists of injecting fine sand against the backs of the teeth by means of a steam jet, and is applicable to all files, from the rasp to the finest of Groubet files. The action of the sand is to cut away the backs of the file teeth, thus forming a straight bevel on the teeth back, and giving a new cutting edge, and the process occupies from three to five minutes.

Fig. 2248.