#2070
Fine cut, 8" long.
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"Here is why you need a good set of files. All frames are made of plastic and/or metal. There are some adjustments you can only achieve by filing down the eyewear. Use files to open up the angle of temples. Remove material from a barrel or a drilled lens. Smooth the end of a cut screw. Reopen the driver slot in a screw head. Precision made in Germany and Switzerland."
#2072
Fine cut, 5-1/2" long.
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"Here is why you need a good set of files. All frames are made of plastic and/or metal. There are some adjustments you can only achieve by filing down the eyewear. Use files to open up the angle of temples. Remove material from a barrel or a drilled lens. Smooth the end of a cut screw. Reopen the driver slot in a screw head. Precision made in Germany and Switzerland."
#2074
Fine cut, 4-3/8" long.
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"Here is why you need a good set of files. All frames are made of plastic and/or metal. There are some adjustments you can only achieve by filing down the eyewear. Use files to open up the angle of temples. Remove material from a barrel or a drilled lens. Smooth the end of a cut screw. Reopen the driver slot in a screw head. Precision made in Germany and Switzerland."
#2078
Coarse cut on wide side while beveled edges are smooth to prevent accidental damage to eyewear. 7-1/2" long.
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"Here is why you need a good set of files. All frames are made of plastic and/or metal. There are some adjustments you can only achieve by filing down the eyewear. Use files to open up the angle of temples. Remove material from a barrel or a drilled lens. Smooth the end of a cut screw. Reopen the driver slot in a screw head. Precision made in Germany and Switzerland."
#2087
You clipped the excess off a screw and are left with a ragged end. In oldie days you’d reach for a riffler or spoon file. Too often the file would slip off the screw and drive itself into the frame or lens.
Now you don’t have to take that chance. A few twists of this tool’s cupped serrated cap will safely round off the ends of cut screws. The working end is made of hardened carbide steel permanently mounted in a carbon steel nickel plated handle.
Works on screws with a maximum diameter of 1.6mm. Also use to smooth the ends of cut temples.
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"Here’s a long story made short. There are fewer fine file manufacturers now than there were two decades ago. Big file companies bought out the smaller specialists. Consequently the cost of files has skyrocketed. We can’t change suppliers as there aren’t any. So what to do? Eliminate the need for a specific file altogether by designing something just as functional but less costly. Two benefits for you. One, it costs less than a riffler file and, two, you are much less likely to slip off the end of a cut screw and file away accidentally on the frame or lens. It’s a win-win."