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Thread: LeCoultre questions
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06-13-2016, 08:47 AM #1
Oh, okay. I have another make so I took the screw out of it & although pillar looking, the pitch was different from the Lecoultre so no telling what threads are in it. I have another 2 day set but a different maker, Veritable Vincent & it has a screw around a .60mm pitch & 2.8mm diameter. I guess if you could get your hands on some metric screws & they them carefully so you don't damage the threads on the razor. If you find one that fits, cut the head off 7 make a small slot in it for the screwdriver. That is how all of these are, with no heads on them. Kinda like a long set screw.
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06-13-2016, 03:06 PM #2
Break off a round toothpick and use it to check the pitch and diameter of the threaded hole. Just twist it into the hole and it will leave marks where the thread is at the root diameter. It may also tell you the outside diameter of the thread.
~RichardBe yourself; everyone else is already taken.
- Oscar Wilde
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06-15-2016, 04:24 PM #3
Just had another shave with the LeCoultre, after a few trips to the carborundum strop, horsehide strop, linen and latigo strop and some more on the short paddle plain leather, it did a very good job on half the face WTG and ATG. Had just finished a Genco about 4/8 for my grandson. I had given him a 6/8 M. Jung for his Bar Mitzvah, but it is too large for him now. It still needs more time on the strops, but it gave an unbloody shave WTG and ATG. Not as close as the LeCoultre but not rough on the face.
The round toothpick sounds good, but right now I have only flats and a 750 count box.OldTraf
Mind the toe, and the heel, 'twill follow.
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06-18-2016, 07:09 PM #4
Had a shave yesterday with the Genco. After five rounds on the strops, as above, it is sharper than my LeCoultre. It gave a near BBS, but although I eased the Spike point it was rough one the left side of my Adam's apple. That is why I prefer the shape of the LeCoultre, any of the old stubbies, and a French head. Pictures once I set up for them and that will close the thread.
OldTraf
Mind the toe, and the heel, 'twill follow.
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06-18-2016, 08:46 PM #5
I thought I had replied to this the other day............
That's nice you have your grandson shaving with a straight also, keeping up this old tradition in the family.
Good luck with the Lecoultre & if you need a slew for it sometime, try Richard's advice about the toothpick. A couple weeks ago, a guy had a lot of blades & frames for some French razors w/o scales. There were a couple Lecoultre's in the bunch of about 15-16 in the lot. I didn't bother to bid on them but they sold for $102 with one bid on them.
Here I have a Fontenille 134 & when I got it, it also had a T.I. removable blade in it. I didn't know T.I. made a razor like that unless they made replacement blades for some razor's back then.
Last edited by engine46; 06-19-2016 at 07:08 PM.
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06-18-2016, 08:53 PM #6
I have a couple of bags of them waiting for attention. The LeCoultre is the only one shave ready. When houseguests leave, will have to bring them to the front of the queue. I know I have at least one TI, one St. Etienne, at least one Fountenille.
OldTraf
Mind the toe, and the heel, 'twill follow.
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06-18-2016, 09:09 PM #7
I've got a nice LeC with the box, spare blade, and screwdriver...beautiful frame backed razor, of which I'm a huge fan....cleaned up and took a beautiful edge.
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06-19-2016, 02:12 PM #8
M. Le Coultre did not patent his razors' features. So...everybody copied them. It also looks like there was one or two shops that made the frames for all and another the did the same for blades. There were copies made in most countries. The real advantage of them was the fairly light weight of having the extra blades when traveling. Much lighter than a 7 day set. That was the age of Imperialism spreading around the globe. The locals in most places did not shave, so a shave was the only way for a heavily tanned official to be set out from them. JMO
~RichardBe yourself; everyone else is already taken.
- Oscar Wilde
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The Following User Says Thank You to Geezer For This Useful Post:
engine46 (06-19-2016)
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06-20-2016, 12:12 AM #9
Had a good shave with the LeCoultre. I think I have at least four others stashed away with other makers names. At some time in the future, I have thought that it would be a good idea to make extra blades from some 52100 I have around. They would be a good candidate for stock removal and professional heat treatment.
OldTraf
Mind the toe, and the heel, 'twill follow.