In the past I've never been able to figure out how to burnish a pivot. So, instead, I've used wet and dry 320, 600, 1000 grit and got a clean, shiny pivot. However, with a current clock repair I would like to try to produce a harder pivot through burnishing.
I have read many articles by An Analysis of Two Pivot Polishing Techniques, A Quick Evaluation of Surface Finish of Pivots by Bob Whiteman and Burnishing by David LaBounty, searched NAWCC forums, read Gazely and various other books and searched the internet. The closest to detailed instructions was the article by Mr. LaBounty who says that it is almost easier to burnish than explain how to do it! He does, however, explain some of it but he must have a smarter student than me in mind.
I have practiced on a piece of mild steel on my lathe. I have cut the steel with a graver, I have smoothed out some of the cut lines with a #6 Grobet file. The file removes the deeper lines but in turn leaves its own behind. I have a Timesaver metal burnisher that I have flattened and scored with 320 grit W&D. I have applied the burnisher using a gentle pressure, slow turning, hard pressure, fast turning using both the scored part and an unscored portion of the burnisher. It hasn't removed all of the lines created by the file but somewhere along the way has put a nice shine on my practice pivot. The pressure that I have used would be too much for a small pivot.
Is anyone able/prepared to explain how this black-art is achieved and what I should be doing when?
Some articles say 320 grit is to be horizontally drawn across the burnisher, others 600.
Some say use a Jacot pivot polisher others say that you can use a lathe. I would like to use a lathe.
Some say, turn the lathe slowly others slowly, then fast.
Some say use gentle pressure, others press hard.
Some say move the burnisher back and forth, others are silent…….
I keep looking for a smooth finish, should I be looking for something else?
Thank you for reading this and thank you even more if you can shed some light. A video would be stupendous!
I have read many articles by An Analysis of Two Pivot Polishing Techniques, A Quick Evaluation of Surface Finish of Pivots by Bob Whiteman and Burnishing by David LaBounty, searched NAWCC forums, read Gazely and various other books and searched the internet. The closest to detailed instructions was the article by Mr. LaBounty who says that it is almost easier to burnish than explain how to do it! He does, however, explain some of it but he must have a smarter student than me in mind.
I have practiced on a piece of mild steel on my lathe. I have cut the steel with a graver, I have smoothed out some of the cut lines with a #6 Grobet file. The file removes the deeper lines but in turn leaves its own behind. I have a Timesaver metal burnisher that I have flattened and scored with 320 grit W&D. I have applied the burnisher using a gentle pressure, slow turning, hard pressure, fast turning using both the scored part and an unscored portion of the burnisher. It hasn't removed all of the lines created by the file but somewhere along the way has put a nice shine on my practice pivot. The pressure that I have used would be too much for a small pivot.
Is anyone able/prepared to explain how this black-art is achieved and what I should be doing when?
Some articles say 320 grit is to be horizontally drawn across the burnisher, others 600.
Some say use a Jacot pivot polisher others say that you can use a lathe. I would like to use a lathe.
Some say, turn the lathe slowly others slowly, then fast.
Some say use gentle pressure, others press hard.
Some say move the burnisher back and forth, others are silent…….
I keep looking for a smooth finish, should I be looking for something else?
Thank you for reading this and thank you even more if you can shed some light. A video would be stupendous!