Is there anything in Canada? I wish there was.
Search "Grobet File Company". There are a couple mail order outfits in Canada using their catalog. Check out ottofrei, perrinwatchparts, and gessweincanada, too. Be sitting, when you start to see what a GOOD file costs! Buy a few good files, and I guarantee you WILL take decent care of them, and you WILL lose your mind when someone abuses them!
Last set of Swiss Files I bought, were around $12 per file. Cheap, and on sale at the time!
Lose the term "gunsmithing". You are searching for tools. Wherever you can find them!
If you get in to Edmonton, like as not, you want to stop at Bedrock Supply, and peruse their offerings. If you can walk around there and not have ideas start going off inside your head like firwroks, you have no imaginatin whatsoever and should be an actuary (someone that is good with numbers, but without enough people skills to be an accountant!)
Cheers
TrevHacking on the accountants!
^^^^this would be where I'd check firstI think Brownells may be your best bet.
Sadly Nicholson isn't what it used to be. Or at least the garden variety sizes and shapes are not what they used to be. My recent Nicholson files are no better than some of the better but still poor imports.
Your best bet for good small files is outfits like Grobet as mentioned.
You'll also want a good assortment of stone files in various grits for jobs from roughing to final polishing. These are the round, square and triangular slip stones that Brownells and other better tool companys like KBC sell. These are essential for working with stoning guides such as used on internal part jigs for guns like the 1911's.
Sideline lament- Oh how I wish that Sandvik still made files. Or if they do that I could find a supplier that still carries them. I bought about 10 Sandvik files about 25 years ago from Hanson Tools out here. They were not cheap but they were not totally out of this world expensive either. But MAN! are they good files. The Sandvik lathe file is still going strong and might just make it until I'm too old and decrepit to use a lathe. The bench files I bought are still good. I finally wore out and ruined one after about 10 years from "finding" too many hardened parts the bad way. But the same cut and size second file is still doing well.
Truly I find that they are better than any Nicholson file I've ever had. Sadly I can't find any reference to anyone selling them any longer. Much like good tap wrenches made by various outfits like Butterfield and Moore&Wright the world has gone down the toilet and embraced the cheap junk imports.
I blame it on the fact that too many treat a file as "metal sandpaper" instead of the proper cutting tool it really is. The old world master machinists must be rolling in their graves at what has happened to the hand working skills that were taken for granted in their day.
Sadly Nicholson isn't what it used to be. Or at least the garden variety sizes and shapes are not what they used to be. My recent Nicholson files are no better than some of the better but still poor imports.
Your best bet for good small files is outfits like Grobet as mentioned.
You'll also want a good assortment of stone files in various grits for jobs from roughing to final polishing. These are the round, square and triangular slip stones that Brownells and other better tool companys like KBC sell. These are essential for working with stoning guides such as used on internal part jigs for guns like the 1911's.
Sideline lament- Oh how I wish that Sandvik still made files. Or if they do that I could find a supplier that still carries them. I bought about 10 Sandvik files about 25 years ago from Hanson Tools out here. They were not cheap but they were not totally out of this world expensive either. But MAN! are they good files. The Sandvik lathe file is still going strong and might just make it until I'm too old and decrepit to use a lathe. The bench files I bought are still good. I finally wore out and ruined one after about 10 years from "finding" too many hardened parts the bad way. But the same cut and size second file is still doing well.
Truly I find that they are better than any Nicholson file I've ever had. Sadly I can't find any reference to anyone selling them any longer. Much like good tap wrenches made by various outfits like Butterfield and Moore&Wright the world has gone down the toilet and embraced the cheap junk imports.
I blame it on the fact that too many treat a file as "metal sandpaper" instead of the proper cutting tool it really is. The old world master machinists must be rolling in their graves at what has happened to the hand working skills that were taken for granted in their day.
As a basic kit, this is excellent - the bench block in particular is pretty difficult to find. There's plenty of room in the case to add extra tools (one triangle file is included).
https://colonelmustard.ca/products/essential-gun-smith-tool-kit
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... Oh how I wish that Sandvik still made files. Or if they do that I could find a supplier that still carries them. I bought about 10 Sandvik files about 25 years ago from Hanson Tools out here. They were not cheap but they were not totally out of this world expensive either. But MAN! are they good files..../QUOTE]
Oh dear.... I only have one, a basic coarse/fine single cut flat file marked "Ergo" I've had for years. No idea where I bought it or what I paid but it was reasonable and it's excellent.
As to Nicolson and Grobet (Vallorbet & Grobet), I just checked my Brownells dovetail-cutting file and it is a Nicholson, marked "2 60" but I remember once looking at the Nicholson catalogue and not finding a parallel (ie not tapered) triangular file. I'm sure that Brownells has two of the faces ground "safe" on special order. My Brownells #2 pillar file is made by Grobet.
The comment about the OP being seated when he sees the prices is well-founded. The pillar files (now listed as "Cooper Power Tools", ie Nicholson. Have they bought out Grobet USA?) aren't too bad at around $17.00 US but the 60º dovetail file is now $50.00! Given that dovetail files of the requisite angles for gunsmithing are likely not common in other trades, I wonder if Brownells has these specially made? The other "sticker shock" files are the very narrow and delicate ones for cutting or restoring the slots in screws.
Addendum: It looks like Sandvik/Ergo is now part of Bahco, and they list files.
Motion Industries also show Sandvik files.