This is interesting...
I am not sure how much I'd use it to purchase now, though
Cheers
Ivo
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This is interesting...
I am not sure how much I'd use it to purchase now, though
Cheers
Ivo
I ordered one and I have Bill Ellis' contraption too - Bill's jig is great, and while it may only take $10 buck s to make it you also have to have the tools, which I do not - but that jig is specifically only for restoring straight razors (pretty narrow) - and while is is unsurpassed (so far) at doing that - it cost something like $25.00 bucks, and I had to buy a vise to hold it (just happens to be a suction mounted hobby vise) so the set up is very similar to HA's - HOWEVER,
I also use the hell out of RAM mounts (GPS in car, mountain bike, laptop mount, etc.) and those mounts aren't cheap and are decently constructed - SO, as I see it, I am getting the mount (which I can use to suction different devices all over the place with the swivel ball joint) AND the cool stainless magnetic thingy - which I frankly would use to restore razors, YES, but I plan on using it to hold all fo the other knives I need to hone - kitchen knives first baby...I am going to sharpen the hell out of all of the flat wide blades I have - this thing looks like it will serve that purpose pretty well.
I just wish the REST of the site were up, with the pastes and the strops and the other stuff)!! They might get a pretty hefty order out of me!! (Hint, um, HINT)
No affiliation by the by...
K
For some people it may be just what they need!
It is worth a try for sure.:)
I still don't get how it works....could someone explain? Maybe a video? pictures? description on how to use? I guess I'm just a visual kind of guy.
Unconventional!
http://www.handamerican.com/2020straight.html
The steel when is placed in a magnetic field is magnetised permanently!
I dont know if i want my razors to act as magnets.
Yiannis
Some time ago blades were sold magnetised (some suggest as part of a marketing gimmick). I have a vintage blade which is magnetised and it certainly doesn't seem to make any difference to the shaving experience.
It might do if James were using one and nicked himself though!
I have used Bill Ellis' razor jig, and it has four pretty strong little magnets to hold the blade - so much so that the blade will snap to the jig (scared the crap out of my wife when I gave it to her to show her how it worked - she almost dropped the whole thing, fortunately it was a solo garbage blade I keep around for testing) -
Now, I have done at least four restorations on that bear, a Henckels with barber notch took a looong time due to some pretty serious rust (and so I left that blade on the jig for weeks!), and then I have either honed the razors myself or sent them off to be honed. I have never, repeat, never seen (or heard of) any of the particulate sticking to the blade because of being magnetized. Perhaps it is because I used water hones that float the particulate to the surface and away from the blade? I don't know, but I personally have never seen any of these blades attract steel dust or snap to the faucet, or have any kind of dust problems on a strop or be attracted to the hardware on a strop - just hasn't happened.
Even when I used a dremel on the blades while in the jig I used the sandpaper drums with water, I never resto dry (unless it is MAAS and even that I rarely let dry). YMMV.
K
Good question, Yannis! I hadn't even considered it. I have not noticed residual metal sticking to the blade from honing, or even the darker slurry from a coticule 'following' the blade when I hone. The only explanation I can think of is that the metal particles from honing are so tiny as to remain in the slurry/hone, or escape my notice via the naked eye. :thinking:
Either way, it hasn't affected the process of honing (the blade in question is one of the easier ones to hone in my rotation).