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imported_doug

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<blockquote class='ipsBlockquote' >

Specially honed teeth to gently shave away high spots on painted finishes without gouging or digging into the coated surface!</blockquote>I don't want any teeth anywhere near my paint, be it specially honed or not. I'll do it the long way with 1500 / 2000 sandpaper, thanks.

I am also skeptical / suspicous because there is no true picture, only a poor drawing.
 
here's the link

http://www.jcwhitney.com/SearchCatContainer.jhtml?_requestid=123588

I get the concept seems okay only if the little side guards don't scratch the paint.
It is difficult to sand flat and this thing "supposedly" uses the flat parts and the squareness of the tool to keep it perpendicular and cut off just above (and not below) the raised "patch"

Like I said cool concept, if it does work like others have suggested. I was just wondering how smooth the shaving leaves it.
 
Puterbum - there is no way you can sand a high spot and leave the surrounding paint untouched. With a stiff block you can knock the high spot down but you're going to sand an area much larger than the high spot to get it done. If this thing works, (and according to some of the other responses it does) it shaves the high spot down while riding over the surface - and will dramatically reduce the sanding required. In principle, it makes a lot of sense. If the product is a piece of junk, it won't work well. But if the frame surfaces are nicely polished with rounded outer edges so they won't grab and scratch, and the blades are only a thou or so above, it might work great.
 
Nib files work very well for their intended use. They reduce the amount of sanding needed on paint flaws (runs, dust nibs, etc). I've never used them for touching up chip repairs because I've never built the touchup paint high enough to warrant using one but I assume they'd work just fine. If you want to try one I'd suggest going to an automotive paint supply store and getting a good one. Forget the JCWhitney POS.
 
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