Thanks for the vote of confidence. Looking forward to giving them a try. I have work to do on a classical, a bass an electric and an acoustic coming up...so should be able to give them a workout.
1+ I have made the torch cleaners work on bass, and feeler gauge "blades"on an electric and an acoustic. They worked...and they were cheap...but that's about all I can say for them. They also took forever and made my fingers very sore ;-)
Since we're on the subject, I think it's worth mentioning at least one product that is very interesting and from what I can ascertain, quite good....but that was about double what I paid. If you exclude the cheap Chinese files, torch cleaners and needle files sets pretending to be nut files, it seems that you are left with just a few good options. The most common steel nut files are Stew Mac, Hosco, Uo-Chikyu. There are a couple of others that like Maxparts or Grizzly or Ibanez. All are made in Japan. All but one of these companies have two things in common: making files is not their main business, and their files look just like files made by the Hiroshima Yasuri company...which makes the Uo-Chikyu branded files. They make lots of other files too. More kinds of files that I was aware existed. So, if you are going to get files like these for the best price...you are essentially looking for the best deal on Uo-Chikyu files. http://www.hiroshimayasuri.com With a bit of help from google translator, I was able to find files that looked identical to all the ones above, except the Ibanez...but pretty close to the Ibanez too...and they the Ibanez files are not cheapter...but I digress.
There is one "contender" that is quite different than the others: Music Nomad files. These are intriguing. Mostly what reviews exist are good. I have found one that is good, but liked the Stew Mac diamond files better (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bZjIGlUexR8). Getting a set of Stew Mac Diamond files for all kinds of guitars and basses would cost more than my first two cars combined. Even the guy in the video who loves them admits they are out of *his* price range and he would probably not have reviewed them if they had not been sent to him free from SM. The Music Nomad files, meanwhile, are diamond coated and about $15 each if you buy them in the 16 piece set. That has sizes for every type of guitar and 5 string bass. If you buy them at once, that is, you get them at about the price you'd pay to get 16 individual Uo-Chikyu steel files. It's about twice what I paid for steel files, but you get diamond files that should last for a long time.
So would the Music Nomad files be a good deal? Maybe. Would love to see a review that compares them to steel files...and they haven't been around that log so hard to know how they do over time. Still, I am intrigued by the fact that the guy who runs Music Nomad actually had them patented...as well as a number of other tools they sell. And some of their other patented products are worth taking a look at as well, I think. I read the patent on the nut files and it was surprisingly interesting to see the engineering that went into the development of these files. I was also surprised to see how many patents they have for guitar products (Rand Rognlien is the Chief Cook and Bottle Washer at MN) https://patents.justia.com/search?q=music+nomad
OK, I think I can see daylight now on the other end of the rabbit hole...







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