Best deburring cutters according to redditors

We found 31 Reddit comments discussing the best deburring cutters. We ranked the 18 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top Reddit comments about Deburring Cutters:

u/jspurlin03 · 16 pointsr/whatisthisthing

Deburring tool. Similar to this one

u/BreeStephany · 7 pointsr/electricians

Invest in a quality multimeter, current clamp and a good set of leads. When you start dealing with 480/277 and higher voltages, your life and the life of others can depend on your meter, so invest in quality.

My Fluke 87V and i410 got me through almost all industrial troubleshooting, with the exception of megging and determining phase rotation for the vast majority of my apprenticeship and has never failed me.

If you do a lot of RMC, invest in a large pair of channellocks, a chain wrench and a swivel head deburring tool. Pipe wrenches are also handy, but you can make do without them.

Just my two cents.

u/khanable_ · 6 pointsr/ender3

Outside of the things others have mentioned (springs, tubing, couplers, SKR, BMG, etc.) - if you don't already have some good tools/spare parts you can use this time to invest in some.

u/StepsToAvoidElevatrs · 6 pointsr/specializedtools

I believe this is a reversible tool holder by NOGA, about $40 on Amazon.

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This comes from a video by my mechanics on youtube, they are AMAZING restoration videos without all the trash littering most of youtube these days - no voiceover, just satisfying, meditative restoration with exemplary attention to detail. Please go check him out.

u/supertroop · 5 pointsr/metalworking

nah brah if you are just cleaning the edge, alls you need is a deburring tool.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B004HW7LZY/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o09_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1

u/ComDet · 5 pointsr/Machinists

I would recommend a nice fairly cheap deburring tool.

This one can be used straight or with the blade at a 90 to the handle for deburring inside holes. I use mine weekly. Uses "b" blades, not sure how common those are vs "e" blades

u/ArmstrongTREX · 4 pointsr/prusa3d

I am mostly recommending tools rather than consumables (like a truck load of filaments :P)

A digital caliper, use it every single day, must have. A $20 Chinese made should be more than sufficient for the tolerance we are printing at.

A pair of good quality side cutter. Prusa printers don’t come with them.
Hakko Micro Cutter

A Noga deburring tool. Very useful for finishing a print and trim sharp edges (brims for example). Cuts plastic like butter.
Noga Deburring Tool

A set of taps. Can’t get very strong thread in plastic, but often good enough. I would prefer a metric set.

A vise. Depends on how much space you have. I use a drill press vise and I find it ok so far.

u/desrtfx · 4 pointsr/3Dprinting

A fairly simple method:

  • bend the brim first against the model and then backwards - repeat a couple times and the brim will fall off
  • use a deburring tool (sample only - first link I found) to remove the remaining brim.
u/LilShaver · 3 pointsr/prusa3d

In addition to the Xacto knife, I'd also recommend a deburring tool. It's great for removing elephant's foot or putting a small chamfer around the edge of parts that have to fit together.

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The "micro cutter" in the other post can also be found under the names of diags, dikes/dykes, or diagonal cutters.

u/Mortimer452 · 3 pointsr/3Dprinting

A deburring tool is absolutely the best for that. Use the smaller, sharp blade it's made for plastic. Keep in mind it only works in one direction, holding in your right hand pulling towards you, and it does a perfect job of cleaning up those edges. If you do it the other way, it will cut way too deep. Since the blade swivels it's perfect for cleaning up screw holes, too.

u/r0zzy5 · 2 pointsr/3Dprinting
u/chejrw · 2 pointsr/MPSelectMiniOwners

I use a deburring tool to remove brims. Works great.

something like this

u/just-a-traveler · 2 pointsr/3Dprinting

this is a great tool for that. it is one of my most used clean up tools.

u/Wizarddata · 2 pointsr/MechanicalKeyboards
u/Gr158 · 1 pointr/reloading

Reed Tool DEBO Pencil Shape Deburring Tool for Copper https://www.amazon.com/dp/B002YPWX3Q/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_8huQDbBA88EXD

I use a pencil reamer. Grabbed one from work and it works really well.. 1-2 passes and they pop right in.

u/JosephSmithandWesson · 1 pointr/Tools

What about something like this

u/Silound · 1 pointr/turning

Something like one of these?

u/SanityIsOptional · 1 pointr/CAguns

Try using a deburring tool to chamfer the edges of the cut.

u/fujimonster · 1 pointr/3Dprinting

To make it easier to remove the brim, get yourself a deburring tool. Makes it so much easier to trim your parts.

Noga NG8150 Heavy Duty Deburr Tool, with 10 S10 blades https://www.amazon.com/dp/B001O62V56/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_sQmBCbWRS5914

u/steelhammerhands · 1 pointr/DIY

I know this might just be another tool you don't have access too, but These seemed to work the best for cleaning up the edges. Go slow, and use a drill press if possible so its completely vertical. Good Luck!

u/Giblet15 · 1 pointr/Plumbing

I Googled pvc chamfer and a ton of stuff showed up in the shopping section.

Reed Tool DEB2 Deburring Tools For Plastic Pipeup To 2" https://www.amazon.com/dp/B000ODWR0E/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_VBYWDb8D6B59W

u/dreneeps · 1 pointr/Plumbing

Reed Tool DEB4 Deburring Tool for Plastic, 1-1/4 to 4-Inch https://www.amazon.com/dp/B000ODVLD8/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_mIoXCb9CTJVFC