I'm thinking 2mm or 3mm. Not too fussed on the colour.Does it need to be a particular colour? What thickness?
That’s pretty much it, as far as my experience goes with using it for knife handles. Just treat it like anything else you’d shape. I’d use abrasives mainly if possible rather than blunt blades and files.Thatlnks for all your input. I've gone and got a single sheet of it to work on.
I heed the warning about the dust, blunting of tools, skin irritation and the like.
I'll only be using hand tools. I'll wear a mask and do it in the back garden in the fresh air. Does anyone have any hints or tips on how to cut it and shape it with hand tools only?
My thinking is mark out the shape with a sharpie, cut as close to it as I dare using multiple fine tooth hacksaw blades, then wet sand it down to the finished article. Thoughts.......?
If you do use it, don't forget to seal any cut, or sanded edges. minute fibres can shed, and you won't know.
Drilling G10 is fine, But cutting it with anything other than an angle grinder 1mm slitting disc or diamond scroll saw blade is a big no no. It would kill them in inchesHandle and Sheaths | GFS Knife Supplies
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I hate working with G10. Dulls saws, drills, mills, and files very quickly. After just a couple milling operations I had made the end of a HSS 13mm cutter serrated, and measurably smaller diameter! Used a new Valorbe file on some and in a few minutes the end of all the teeth were shiny blunt.
Dust makes skin itch. Wet sanding is the way to go, wearing nitrile gloves. Loose fibres on cut edges can get into skin.
Its the densest non-metal knife handle material and adds a lot of mass.
You don’t. Woody Girl’s experience is with hand lay up, not G10 board. Just sand G10, 240 or higher is fine.How would you seal the edges?
Thank youYou don’t. Woody Girl’s experience is with hand lay up, not G10 board. Just sand G10, 240 or higher is fine.