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12-28-2009, 01:06 AM #1
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Thanked: 13249Wade & Butcher 6/8 hollow Heirloom restore
This is for our very own SRP member Seminole, this is what he sent me, his Grandfather's Wade & Butcher.. The scales were thrashed and the razor was in OK shape just needed some TLC...
I did a full polish to mirror on the blade with greaseless compounds starting at 80 grit then up through 120-180-320-400-600 then I switched to polishing compounds in Emory -SS- Chrome - and finished with Turtle Wax Polishing Compound...
The pivot hole was oversize so it got a brass sleeve, sorry the pics didn't come out as well as I had hoped for, but you can still make it out...
I made scales out of the Amethyst acrylic and used a white acrylic wedge to tie in the TCU colors for Seminole I know we didn't discuss the wedge so I used Google to find the schools colors... Hope you like that choice... The pins are bi-metal stacked bullseye's and I added the 3rd pin...
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12-28-2009, 01:13 AM #2
I love the purple scales and the fact it belonged to his grand dad makes it super special. Great job creating a smile on our faces Glen.
Having Fun Shaving
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The Following User Says Thank You to coachmike For This Useful Post:
gssixgun (12-28-2009)
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12-28-2009, 01:22 AM #3
Love those scales! Lottsa nice custom touches on this one G
The white gleam of swords, not the black ink of books, clears doubts and uncertainties and bleak outlooks.
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gssixgun (12-28-2009)
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12-28-2009, 01:34 AM #4
Very nice! Not a terribly common color, but I really like it.
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gssixgun (12-28-2009)
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12-28-2009, 03:30 AM #5
It looks as though you have rounded and smoothed the area on the spine that has been flattened by honing. I have seen a few razors that had wear like this, maybe a bit more aggressive, and passed on them. Does that do anything to throw off your angle when honing the blade, or can you just compensate for the lack of thickness by applying tape? I am just trying to grasp what makes a blade salvageable for use and what makes it a paperweight. Is it possible for an old blade to have so much wear on the spine that you can't hone it properly? Or am I overplotting this?
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12-28-2009, 03:32 AM #6
Gorgeous scales, as always, Glen! I bet Seminole is going to be very happy!
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gssixgun (12-28-2009)
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12-28-2009, 10:11 PM #7
- Join Date
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Thanked: 13249
You are simplifying it...
But in answer to the direct questions
First, the width of the spine has hardly changed from when it came to me... just the contour changed..
Next one I will measure it and see what the real change was...
Second, these razors always need a complete bevel re-set so the two minute changes would offset each other..
Third, You are reading to much into bevel angle, there is actually a thread on here that I started so we could get some real numbers on vintage razors... Personally I have measured angles from 12 -22 degrees... 3M electrical tape changes the angle about .65 degrees on a 6/8 razor so that requires quite a few layers of tape or quite a bit of steel removal to change the angle outside of usable paramerters...
As to what is salvageable, look at the overall contour of the blade too, not just spine wear... and whether the spine wear is even, and the edge is even....
The worst thing is uneven Toe wear, or a Frown, both of those cost steel to fix right...
Hope that helped you...