Since I seem to be on a posting jag here, I have always wanted to know what
is the use in woodworking for wire brushes that we make and sell exclusively
to the woodworking industry. It is a Beech "Bent-handle" and "Shoe-handle"
with very fine .006" Brass wire. The action is so soft that it tickles if
you run it on your arm. As far as I know, I'm the only manufacturer and I
started making them as specials. They are a bitch to make and not cheap and
my customers won't tell me what they are used for, they just say the brushes
are "Magic". I'm thinking some finishing operation
Here's a link to pictures of the brushes, just imagine the fine brass fill,
I don't catalog them as such ,as there is such a limited market and I don't
even know what it is.
http://www.ohiobrush.com/Pages/scratch.html
Tom Gardner (nospam) wrote:
> Since I seem to be on a posting jag here, I have always wanted to know what
> is the use in woodworking for wire brushes that we make and sell exclusively
> to the woodworking industry. It is a Beech "Bent-handle" and "Shoe-handle"
> with very fine .006" Brass wire. The action is so soft that it tickles if
> you run it on your arm. As far as I know, I'm the only manufacturer and I
> started making them as specials. They are a bitch to make and not cheap and
> my customers won't tell me what they are used for, they just say the brushes
> are "Magic". I'm thinking some finishing operation
>
> Here's a link to pictures of the brushes, just imagine the fine brass fill,
> I don't catalog them as such ,as there is such a limited market and I don't
> even know what it is.
>
> http://www.ohiobrush.com/Pages/scratch.html
This response may come through twice since there was a power hiccup at
the time I sent one of them.
I would strongly suspect that the best use for these brushes is for
something like refinishing. I use the softest brushes I can when I am
on the last lap of stripping a door or anything else. Imagine a door
that has been sitting with paste stripper on it for an hour or so so
that the wood is wet. After removing all the old finish possible, you
will still have bits of this and that tha didn't come out with your
normal strip procedure.
These areas will be dents, the inside corners of door panels, etc.
This is where a really soft metal brush and a wooden pic shine. With a
really soft brush you can loosen and remove the remaining finish
without scoring the grain.
I can also see them for refinishing passage door hardware since they
won't scratch the surface of the metal.
Where are you buying them?
Robert
[email protected] wrote:
> I can also see them for refinishing passage door hardware since they
> won't scratch the surface of the metal.
I'd be interested in a version like a paint brush, with bristles about
2.5" long. I find it's easier to do detail work. I think LV sells
them, but they're pricey and a little stiff.
JP
Tom Gardner (nospam) wrote:
> Since I seem to be on a posting jag here, I have always wanted to know what
> is the use in woodworking for wire brushes that we make and sell exclusively
> to the woodworking industry. It is a Beech "Bent-handle" and "Shoe-handle"
> with very fine .006" Brass wire. The action is so soft that it tickles if
> you run it on your arm. As far as I know, I'm the only manufacturer and I
> started making them as specials. They are a bitch to make and not cheap and
> my customers won't tell me what they are used for, they just say the brushes
> are "Magic". I'm thinking some finishing operation
If your customers won't answer your questions about how they use the
brush, you may not want to know. They could be using them for perverse
sexual practices, illicit drug manufacturing, or money laundering
(cheap labor, no need for washer and dryer).
R
Tom Gardner (nospam) wrote:
> Since I seem to be on a posting jag here, I have always wanted to know what
> is the use in woodworking for wire brushes that we make and sell exclusively
> to the woodworking industry. It is a Beech "Bent-handle" and "Shoe-handle"
> with very fine .006" Brass wire. The action is so soft that it tickles if
> you run it on your arm. As far as I know, I'm the only manufacturer and I
> started making them as specials. They are a bitch to make and not cheap and
> my customers won't tell me what they are used for, they just say the brushes
> are "Magic". I'm thinking some finishing operation
If your customers won't answer your questions about how they use the
brush, you may not want to know. They could be using them for perverse
sexual practices, illicit drug manufacturing, or money laundering
(cheap labor, no need for washer and dryer investment).
R
Tom Gardner (nospam) wrote:
SNIP
> What is LV?
SNIP
Tom, check this out. Is this about what you have? I am using brass
brushes a little larger than these that are really softm (I dont' know
about these), and I don't get much use out of them since they are so
soft, but they do exactly what I need to do, and they aren't really
that expensive.
http://tinyurl.com/gpaty
Your thoughts?
Robert
Tom Gardner (nospam) wrote:
> "Jay Pique" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
> >
> > [email protected] wrote:
> >
> >> I can also see them for refinishing passage door hardware since they
> >> won't scratch the surface of the metal.
> >
> > I'd be interested in a version like a paint brush, with bristles about
> > 2.5" long. I find it's easier to do detail work. I think LV sells
> > them, but they're pricey and a little stiff.
> >
> > JP
> >
>
> What is LV?
>
> Look at my "Loop Handle" ...how about something like that in .006 brass?
>
> http://www.ohiobrush.com/Pages/misc.html
Those might do the trick. The ones I'm talking about come from Lee
Valley Tools - www.leevalley.com. Actually...now that I'm looking for
them on their website I can't seem to find them.
How much for a "sample" of one of those?
JP
Jay Pique wrote:
> I'd be interested in a version like a paint brush, with bristles about
> 2.5" long. I find it's easier to do detail work. I think LV sells
> them, but they're pricey and a little stiff.
>
> JP
Jay,
We carry a brass bristle brush that is like a paint brush. You can
scroll to the bottom of this link:
http://www.rlarson.com/Product/Brushes/index.html
Here is the brush alone:
http://www.rlarson.com/Product/Brushes/8394525.jpg
Our home page has a dealer lookup via zip if this is what you are
looking for.
Robert
Fallow his link. He's making them, not buying.
http://www.ohiobrush.com/Pages/scratch.html
<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
>
> Where are you buying them?
>
> Robert
>
"Jay Pique" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> [email protected] wrote:
>
>> I can also see them for refinishing passage door hardware since they
>> won't scratch the surface of the metal.
>
> I'd be interested in a version like a paint brush, with bristles about
> 2.5" long. I find it's easier to do detail work. I think LV sells
> them, but they're pricey and a little stiff.
>
> JP
>
What is LV?
Look at my "Loop Handle" ...how about something like that in .006 brass?
http://www.ohiobrush.com/Pages/misc.html
"Tom Gardner" <tom(nospam)@ohiobrush.com> wrote
>
> Don't laugh, I was visited by Homeland Security because a Government
> customer found "Mysterious white powder" on our brushes...we use corn
> starch as a dry lubricant for the steel wire to make it feed beter. THAT
> was fun!
>
Was he smart enough to figure out that corn starch is cheaper and works
better than cocaine?
Lee Michaels wrote:
>
> "Tom Gardner" <tom(nospam)@ohiobrush.com> wrote
>>
>> Don't laugh, I was visited by Homeland Security because a Government
>> customer found "Mysterious white powder" on our brushes...we use corn
>> starch as a dry lubricant for the steel wire to make it feed beter. THAT
>> was fun!
>>
>
> Was he smart enough to figure out that corn starch is cheaper and works
> better than cocaine?
If it was Homeland Security they were worried about anthrax, not cocaine.
If the analytical powers of their forensics operation are such that they
can't tell anthrax from cornstarch then God help us all.
--
--John
to email, dial "usenet" and validate
(was jclarke at eye bee em dot net)
On Sat, 24 Jun 2006 21:46:53 -0400, Lee Michaels <leemichaels*nadaspam*@comcast.net> wrote:
>
> "Tom Gardner" <tom(nospam)@ohiobrush.com> wrote
>>
>> Don't laugh, I was visited by Homeland Security because a Government
>> customer found "Mysterious white powder" on our brushes...we use corn
>> starch as a dry lubricant for the steel wire to make it feed beter. THAT
>> was fun!
>>
>
> Was he smart enough to figure out that corn starch is cheaper and works
> better than cocaine?
Idiots here stopped all train traffic for the entire evening,
recently, because some "bags with white powder" were found on
tracks. It turned out very quickly that the bags contained "stearic
acid" used to make candles. They fell of a train.
(a bonus homework question, why are some substances packed into
bags. Because bags are easy to handle by workers. Hardly can be used
for very hazardous stuff)
Stearic acid is as harmless as it could possibly be.
Despite that, no one wanted to take responsibility for just saying,
come on, let's put the gloves on, set them aside and resume traffic.
So the dumbasses called out hazmat crews, which have rules limiting
their working hours, so they also disrupted morning traffic removing
them.
I saw it with my eyes as I was on those stopped commuter trains, I
started walking along the tracks and saw the bags and laughed.
I once sold a military surplus incubator to a Kentucky farmer for
growing turkey, and received many calls from some govt agency about
that. Mind you, they sold that incubator to me. (it was, accidentally,
my worst deal ever, paid $167 for it and sold for 0.01)
i
Did you tell them they ought to get a real job?
"Tom Gardner" <tom(nospam)@ohiobrush.com> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
>
> Don't laugh, I was visited by Homeland Security because a Government
> customer found "Mysterious white powder" on our brushes...we use corn
starch
> as a dry lubricant for the steel wire to make it feed beter. THAT was
fun!
>
>
<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> Tom Gardner (nospam) wrote:
>
> SNIP
>
>> What is LV?
>
> SNIP
>
> Tom, check this out. Is this about what you have? I am using brass
> brushes a little larger than these that are really softm (I dont' know
> about these), and I don't get much use out of them since they are so
> soft, but they do exactly what I need to do, and they aren't really
> that expensive.
Those are our standard #300-B, 3x7 row toothbrush style. we don't make them
but we cary them. We sell for about $.72 ea in boxes of 50. There are two
sources, foreign and domestic with an obvious quality difference. The ones
shown are domestic and the best are made by "Gordon Brush", you can tell by
the plywood handle. The ones I make are 4x19 row, 14" long x 1-1/8" wide,
brush part is 6" with 1-1/8" trim. All brush companies buy and sell to each
other.
>
> http://tinyurl.com/gpaty
>
> Your thoughts?
>
> Robert
>
"RicodJour" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
>
> If your customers won't answer your questions about how they use the
> brush, you may not want to know. They could be using them for perverse
> sexual practices, illicit drug manufacturing, or money laundering
> (cheap labor, no need for washer and dryer).
>
> R
>
Don't laugh, I was visited by Homeland Security because a Government
customer found "Mysterious white powder" on our brushes...we use corn starch
as a dry lubricant for the steel wire to make it feed beter. THAT was fun!
"J. Clarke" <[email protected]> writes:
> If it was Homeland Security they were worried about anthrax, not cocaine.
> If the analytical powers of their forensics operation are such that they
> can't tell anthrax from cornstarch then God help us all.
Well, you can open up the bag, stick your finger in, and lick it.
--
Sending unsolicited commercial e-mail to this account incurs a fee of
$500 per message, and acknowledges the legality of this contract.