Bevel tool
Hey Judiraz,
I created a tool! (I probably made it much more complicated than it needed to be).
One of my buddies at work has a 3D printer, and encouraged me to come up with useful things to print.
So - I created a bevel tool for round soap bars.
I used a program called OpenSCAD to create the digital model, then 'sliced' it and printed it on the 3D printer. (I can go into painful detail, and/or share the model if anybody's interested).
The basic idea was to make something that would fit in my left hand, hold a 3" round bar of soap, allow me to rotate it with my right hand, cut a bevel, and direct the cuttings away from the tool.
This pic shows better how the cutting hole is placed.
The cutting edge is scavenged from one of those 5-blade razor heads... I just broke one apart, hammered one of the little razors flat, and slid it into the slot I had designed in to hold it.
From the back you can see the cut-out for the trimmings better. (The green is a residue of the painter's tape we use on the print-bed of the 3D printer, to make newly-printed pieces easier to get off. Without the tape the new prints tend to stick to the print-bed.)
It's pretty crude, but it works like I expected.
If I use it when the soap is still soft I can get a pretty clean bevel.
I've discovered that if I let the new soap harden too much it will distort the tiny little cutting blade, but (surprise!) it's not really a problem, because it distorts it into a nice curve that looks almost better! I love it when mistakes lead to improvements.
I'm pretty sure you wouldn't need a 3D printer to make a tool like this, but it's what I was doing at the time, and it's a pretty simple shape from a geometrical point of view. There's probably an easier way, but this one works for me.
Thanks for asking!
Todd