I've gotten a lot of really great tips from the luthiers here. I hate to take, take, take without giving anything back so I think that this trick might prove to be useful.
I've been making my own emery boards/sanding boards by gluing sandpaper onto tongue depressors- you know, those huge popsicle stick-lookings things that you swipe from the glass jar while waiting in that little room for the doctor...
Medline Tongue Depressors Non-Sterile | Walgreens
I use rubber cement as the adhesive since it can be applied very evenly. My first batch had the sandpaper on just one side. For my second batch I folded the sandpaper over to make them two-sided. That did give me one good edge but otherwise wasn't much better than the original. However with my latest design I fold the sandpaper over on both edges but do not cover the whole back of the tongue depressor so I can write down the grit and other information there.
It was getting expensive going to the doctor strictly to steal more tongue depressors so I got 1000 from a local medical supply house for about $7.00.
Steve Ahola
EDIT (8/21/14) I've found that the fret dressing stick from StewMac (with the 1/4" wide sanding belts) are more versatile than my tongue depressor sanding boards which I have been using mainly on the fretboard itself, adding "little brothers" like popsicle sticks and those skinny sticks in corn dogs. (I still do use my 600 and 1500 sanding boards for polishing the tops of frets.)
I see that Rockler sells a 1/2" wide version of the StewMac fret dressing stick which could be handy between the frets on a fretboard.
I've been making my own emery boards/sanding boards by gluing sandpaper onto tongue depressors- you know, those huge popsicle stick-lookings things that you swipe from the glass jar while waiting in that little room for the doctor...
Medline Tongue Depressors Non-Sterile | Walgreens
I use rubber cement as the adhesive since it can be applied very evenly. My first batch had the sandpaper on just one side. For my second batch I folded the sandpaper over to make them two-sided. That did give me one good edge but otherwise wasn't much better than the original. However with my latest design I fold the sandpaper over on both edges but do not cover the whole back of the tongue depressor so I can write down the grit and other information there.
It was getting expensive going to the doctor strictly to steal more tongue depressors so I got 1000 from a local medical supply house for about $7.00.
Steve Ahola
EDIT (8/21/14) I've found that the fret dressing stick from StewMac (with the 1/4" wide sanding belts) are more versatile than my tongue depressor sanding boards which I have been using mainly on the fretboard itself, adding "little brothers" like popsicle sticks and those skinny sticks in corn dogs. (I still do use my 600 and 1500 sanding boards for polishing the tops of frets.)
I see that Rockler sells a 1/2" wide version of the StewMac fret dressing stick which could be handy between the frets on a fretboard.
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