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Shipping & Returns
Start your B2B business
Increased repurchase rate
For All Your Questions
Shipping & Returns
Start your B2B business
Increased repurchase rate
For All Your Questions
Shipping & Returns
Start your B2B business
Increased repurchase rate
For All Your Questions
Shipping & Returns
Start your B2B business
Increased repurchase rate
For All Your Questions
Shipping & Returns
Start your B2B business
Increased repurchase rate
For All Your Questions
In heavy industry, tool failure is not just an inconvenience; it can result in critical shutdowns, damage high-value workpieces and reduce profitability.
For professional tool wholesalers, foundries, shipyards and automotive plants, the reliability of components such as carbide burrs is an essential part of their operations. You can’t afford for a tool to fail under pressure. But with so many options on the market, how can you tell the difference between a high-performance asset and a low-cost liability?
This guide goes beyond the surface. We’ll explore the critical types and shapes of burrs and the common issues we’ve encountered. Then we’ll pull back the curtain on the manufacturing process — specifically the brazing and inspection — that sets Galiptools burrs apart from the competition.
Galiptools offers high-quality carbide burrs that are highly resistant to bending and breaking. We also provide excellent OEM services, custom packaging, and logo options.
Galiptools also has a high production capacity to meet demand for bulk orders.
Before we get into the engineering, let’s start with a quick baseline. A carbide burr, also known as a carbide rotary file or “die grinder bit,” is a rotary cutting tool used for removing, shaping, and finishing material.
Think of it as a high-speed, heavy-duty file for your die grinder.
The “carbide” in the name refers to tungsten carbide, an extremely hard and heat-resistant material. Unlike standard HSS (High-Speed Steel) bits, a carbide burr can be run at higher speeds and can cut much harder materials (like steel, stainless steel, and cast iron) without dulling or breaking down from the heat.
Their primary uses include:
A burr’s shape dictates its function. Using the wrong shape is like trying to turn a screw with a hammer—it’s inefficient and leads to a poor-quality result. For a wholesaler or a factory manager, stocking the right profiles is essential.
Here are the most common shapes and their primary applications:
Currently, the F-type and L-type models are in higher demand for heavy industry applications. Meanwhile, the C-type and A-type models are more popular for DIY projects.
The ‘cut’ of the burr refers to its flute geometry, which determines how it removes material.
Why it’s better: This results in a much smoother finish and gives the operator far greater control. It is the standard for general-purpose deburring and finishing on almost all materials.
1. The carbide head fractures, typically due to residual brazing stresses not being fully relieved, resulting in micro-cracks within the weld seam that cause breakage during use.
2. The shank bends, usually because the selected carbide burr shank is made of ordinary steel with insufficient toughness and lacks final inspection.
Now that we’ve covered the basics, let’s talk about the part you can’t see.
Our products are engineered for the extreme demands of foundries, shipyards, and automotive plants. In these environments, high cutting forces exert significant pressure on the shank and cutting edges of a rotary file. A weak weld or a brittle carbide head won’t just wear out—it will snap.
The stability and quality of our tools hinge on two critical, interconnected factors that we have perfected: The Manufacturing Process and The Inspection Process.
The single most common point of failure for a carbide burr is the joint between the tungsten carbide head and the steel shank. How this weld is created determines the tool’s strength, durability, and resistance to chatter and breakage.
Copper Brazing – The Old School Process
Let’s be honest, this is the cheap way to make a burr. It’s the method most low-cost manufacturers use. The process involves coating the shank in a copper-based filler, heating it to a scorching 1100°C (2012°F), and letting it cool.
This method has two critical, unacceptable drawbacks for industrial use:
Silver Soldering – The Modern Upgrade
A far superior approach is silver soldering (or silver brazing). This process uses a specialized silver-based alloy that melts at a much lower temperature, around 700-800°C (1292-1472°F).
This is well below the 900°C danger zone, resulting in minimal or no damage to the properties of the carbide. The silver alloy also creates a significantly stronger and more durable joint.
This method is clearly the winner in terms of performance. But at Galiptools, we’ve taken it two steps further.
It’s not just silver brazing that we use; we’ve built a unique, automated process around it to create a burr with unmatched integrity.
Even a perfect process demands a perfect inspection. We don’t just carry out a “spot check” at the end of the production line.
We use dynamic inspection methods throughout the entire production process.
Advanced equipment such as lasers, infrared thermometers, metallurgical microscopes and scanning electron microscopes are used to examine the microstructure and residual stress distribution at the brazed interface. This verifies that the weld is flawless at a microscopic level.
Finally, every burr undergoes a physical test. We test the bending strength of the shank after brazing by applying a specified pressure. This evaluates the product’s real-world resistance to bending and snapping.
Any product that fails to meet these exacting standards is eliminated. This is our guarantee of quality.
Owning a superior tool is the first step; using it correctly is the second.
When sourcing tools for a demanding, high-stakes environment, guesswork is not an option. There’s a world of difference between a low-cost burr and a Galiptools burr: the former is a hidden liability, while the latter is a certified, reliable asset.
Stop compensating for tool failure and start investing in process integrity.
Contact the Galiptools team today to request a technical consultation, receive our latest catalogue or discuss how our manufacturing expertise can enhance your operational reliability.
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