A: Some industrial distributors offer third-party regrinding. Check with your point of purchase for a tooling management program.


Another interpretation: "cdrcut" could be read as CD R cut — as in cutting or engraving Compact Discs.

There is a niche community of people using low-power diode lasers (like the NEJE, Ortur, or Atomstack) to etch the label side of CDs or cut thin plastic discs. The "922" might refer to a 922nm laser diode (uncommon, but 445nm and 455nm are standard for blue lasers).

Could this be a part number for a laser module? Possibly, but no major brand uses "cuttoolcdrcut922" as an official SKU.

There was a die-cutting machine called the Craftwell Cuttoo (a smaller, portable e-cutter). Someone searching for "Cuttoo tool" + "Cricut" + a random number might end up mashing all the words together into "cuttoolcdrcut922".

If that’s you: The Cuttoo uses its own blades and mats, not Cricut’s.