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Thread: Adjusting loft

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    I am interested to see how this thread works out.

    One of my first brushes was a Parker Silvertip. I love the soft tips of the brush, but it splays too easily and has less backbone than I prefer. It is a wonderful brush for lathering creams and croaps, but is not so good for loading harder soaps. I might try the O-ring trick, but Ultimately, I would like to reset the knot in the faux horn handle.

    The only knot I ever reset was an inexpensive VDH pure badger. The brush fell off the counter and the knot popped out when the brush hit the floor. The handle had a metal insert, so I could not change the loft. I used Gorilla Glue (original) as the adhesive. It seemed to work well.
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    Senior Member blabbermouth bluesman7's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Gasman View Post
    If the hole is deep enough and the knot fit somewhat snug, ive sed quarters in the bottom of the hole to shim the knot up for testing. This allowed me to test and when i found the right higth i dumped the glue ontop and around the quarters. An extra buck or buck and a hLf is the price i paid to get the right loft. It also adds a bit of weight.
    This is what I'm hoping I can do. I guess since I'm making the handle I can make the fit as snug as I like. Maybe I will do a quick and dirty out of a large dowel to verify the taper of the hole. I'm thinking that as deep as I think I want to go I will want to taper the hole so that the brush can bloom a bit. Yeah the dowel sounds like the ticket.

    Quote Originally Posted by RayClem View Post
    Ultimately, I would like to reset the knot in the faux horn handle.
    Great minds think alike! I picked up a faux horn blank at Woodcraft yesterday.
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    Senior Member blabbermouth
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    Quote Originally Posted by bluesman7 View Post
    This is what I'm hoping I can do. I guess since I'm making the handle I can make the fit as snug as I like. Maybe I will do a quick and dirty out of a large dowel to verify the taper of the hole. I'm thinking that as deep as I think I want to go I will want to taper the hole so that the brush can bloom a bit. Yeah the dowel sounds like the ticket.

    Great minds think alike! I picked up a faux horn blank at Woodcraft yesterday.
    Interesting idea that tapered hole. I don't think I have reknotted a handle that had a tapered hole from the factory.

    The usual advice I have seem from knot suppliers is that the hole be drilled 1-2mm larger than the size of the knot. That is because the knot size is given as measured at the glue plug. The knot bulges out slightly above the glue plug and that needs to be accommodated. If the knot is fitted too snugly it may lead to the handle cracking over time when the knot swells a bit.

    That happened to a custom reknot I had ordered with the loft reset lower than the factory brush. It was fixed at no charge by the custom maker and has not cracked since the new handle was made to fix the problem.

    Faux horn should make a great looking handle.

    Bob
    Life is a terminal illness in the end

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    Razor Vulture sharptonn's Avatar
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    Well, lots of ways to do it, but washing the new knot first a few times and allowing it to dry has been my best tool to determine preferred loft as test-fitting. As it has bloomed (In 2-band badgers, anyway) it gives you what you will get at a particular loft a lot closer than simply sticking a new knot in directly from the maker.
    Only example I can find of what I mean....https://sharprazorpalace.com/brushma...lly-brush.html
    Certainly this would not matter on synthetics I would think.
    Last edited by sharptonn; 02-10-2019 at 03:55 PM.
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    Senior Member blabbermouth bluesman7's Avatar
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    My quest does indeed pertain to a synthetic. This all started to improve my travel synthetic for travel to Texas.
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    Razor Vulture sharptonn's Avatar
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    You might try some masking tape around the knot to get it temporarily snug.
    If you get silicone in the 'hairs' would not be good, I think?
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    Senior Member blabbermouth bluesman7's Avatar
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    Yeah the masking tape or even a paper shim may keep it tight enough to test.

    The other problem with the dab of silicone is that silicone has a problem sticking to cured silicone.
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