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Thread: Curious About This Stone

  1. #1
    Aspiring Shaver gflight's Avatar
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    Default Curious About This Stone

    I went to my great aunt 85th birthday this weekend and this was her husbands dad's sharpening stone. I would like to know anything about it. There was a little "whetrock" that I assume was a slurry stone?

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    "When defeat comes, accept it as a signal that your plans are not sound,
    rebuild those plans, and set sail once more toward your coveted goal."

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    Senior Member blabbermouth tintin's Avatar
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    looks like a coticule to me but we'll wait for someone with more knowledge.

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    Senior Member dinnermint's Avatar
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    Looks grimey, are those pics after lapping? This will also clue in on the hardness and what color the slurry will be.

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    Senior Member Badgister's Avatar
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    My guess is a coticule that has been used with oil

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    illegitimum non carborundum Utopian's Avatar
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    I agree that it's probably an oiled two-sided coticule, with the two sides glued together. If you produce a slurry on the lighter side, and it is a coticule, then the slurry will be milky white. If the back side is a bbw, then the slurry will be purple. If it is slate, which given its apparent age is unlikely, then the slurry would be white and more difficult to produce.

    Lap it and it will be good to go!
    doorsch likes this.

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    Senior Member rodb's Avatar
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    I'll agree with everyone so far, a very dirty Coticule.
    Thaeris likes this.

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    Senior Member blabbermouth
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    Yup, greasy newer glued, Coticule. Don’t think the small stone is a slurry stone.

    A soak in Simple Green or 99 cent store “Awsome” and water, scrub with a Scotch Brite sponge. I have been using the 99cent store Awsome and find it works better than Simple Green, for degreasing stones, and it’s a bit cheaper.

    You may have to soak it for a few days or week, to get all the oil and rancid smell, out of it.

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    Aspiring Shaver gflight's Avatar
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    Thanks for the feedback. His grandson has it and two razors and has no plans to do anything with them. I was just trying to find out some info/history to relate to him. The one razor has EXtreme hone wear and the other was in good shape except both scales had cracks....

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    illegitimum non carborundum Utopian's Avatar
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    The small stone looks as much like a coticule as the large one does.

    I would try lapping it before bothering trying to de-grease it. Coticules don't seem to soak oil very far in anyway, so you might as well go ahead and lap it first. By the time you have that done, you may find that the oil will be almost, if not completely, gone.
    JimmyHAD and benhunt like this.

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