
...and now I ran out of blades. The local shops here around don't carry them any longer, so I decided to order them online. Hmmm, these x-acto blades should fit my not-x-actly x-acto cutter I hoped, and ordered a few...



Yes, of course they don't fit. Now I am not the one who likes to return ordered goods, but I don't like the strategy of every-brand-has-its-own-"standardised"-system either, so I will not buy another blade holder only because I bought these blades!

So I cut off a length of M12 threaded rod and shortened an M4 screw (both cheap), cut a slot and tapped an M4 thread (quick), adjusted and smoothed the slot with a flat needle file (not so quick), cut two pieces off a brass washer, filed them to exact thickness (not at all quick either) and soldered them in place in order the blade would not tilt when thightening the M4 screw, et voilà!

In the end the whole exercise cost me about two hours of work, hence "the world's most expensive x-acto knife"!
This knife is quite heavy, which I like, and the thread yields a good grip. Although I much prefer woodworking over metalworking it was fun making this cutter - but I still have no replacement blades for my old cutter!
