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Thread: Need help

  1. #21
    At this point in time... gssixgun's Avatar
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    Default Finish and SOTD

    I went from the Chosera 1k t0 the 5k and 10k the edge held without any chipping or failure.

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    I decided on the Black Thuringen to give it a good face friendly feel to the edge,

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    I got a CCS from the edge, checked under Magnification for edge degradation and found none so it is ready to head home


    **** Disclaimer, I am by no means recommending to go buy one, as I have no idea how long the edge will hold... All I can say for sure is that I was able to create an edge that held up to a shave***
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    "No amount of money spent on a Stone can ever replace the value of the time it takes learning to use it properly"
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    Proprietor - GemStar Custom Razors Honing/Restores/Regrinds Website

  2. #22
    Senior Member Badgister's Avatar
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    So like a gold dollar without the trouble of having to grind away at the stabilizer? How did you find the grind Glen? Namely at the heel and the tip.
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  3. #23
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    oh wow it's looking real good. I really appreciate the work you did on it.
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  4. #24
    At this point in time... gssixgun's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Badgister View Post
    So like a gold dollar without the trouble of having to grind away at the stabilizer? How did you find the grind Glen? Namely at the heel and the tip.
    Heel was surprisingly better than the toe

    I had to push the toe a little to bring it into line

    Once the bevel was fully set it all went as expected
    "No amount of money spent on a Stone can ever replace the value of the time it takes learning to use it properly"
    Very Respectfully - Glen

    Proprietor - GemStar Custom Razors Honing/Restores/Regrinds Website

  5. #25
    Senior Member Badgister's Avatar
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    Good show! I am curious to give it a whirl. If they provide a decent shave, maybe they could make good freebie razors to introduce friends to the fold.
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  6. #26
    Senior Member blabbermouth
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    Little bit of research reveals the steel used in those razors is S45C - A medium carbon steel typically used for machine/structural use. The part of the description taht caught my eye:

    JIS S45C grade carbon steel is widely used in machinery manufacturing, good mechanical properties of this steel. But S45C Grade Steel is a medium carbon steel, hardened performance is not good, 45 steel can be hardened to HRC42 ~ 46. So if you need to surface hardness, but also hopes to play 45 # steel superior mechanical properties, often 45 # steel surface carburizing, so you can get the required surface hardness. JIS S45c steel are mainly used for a variety of motor shaft, automotive parts.
    So assuming they heat treated it properly, maximum hardness you could expect is a rockwell 46, typically for straight razors we're looking for mid 50s to low 60s. There's a bit of a trade off, at the higher end of the rockwell scale it's hard to remove material and get a working edge, on the lower end it's fast to sharpen because the steel wears faster, which leads to faster dulling as well. So it's probably a little on the soft side, and given Glen's test probably takes a nice edge but loses it faster than we would like. Slightly prettier/better ground Gold Dollar would be my guess.

    Which means it's serviceable, you'll just be touching it up more than a higher quality blade. I can understand why folks wouldn't want to spend $100-$200 on a newer quality carbon steel blade. But my Gold Dollar edge typically lasts less than a month's worth of shaves. About 20 daily shaves is the longest it's lasted without a touch up. Meanwhile I have vintage razors bought off ebay (for probably less than I spent on the Gold Dollar) that were made before WWII that will hold an edge for several months.
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  8. #27
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    I should have it tomorrow according to tracking. Now I do have a strop and I am lead to believe it needs to be stopped before each shave. is that correct?

  9. #28
    Senior Member criswilson10's Avatar
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    Don't strop it before your first shave.
    Glen's edge is ready to go and there is no reason to mess it up with a stropping accident before the shave.
    Strop it some after the shave to ensure that the blade is dry. And then really strop it before your next shave.
    Some people never go crazy. What truly horrible lives they must lead - Charles Bukowski

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  11. #29
    At this point in time... gssixgun's Avatar
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    What Cris said

    Plus there will be an instruction/info sheet in with the razors

    It will say the same thing "DO NOT" strop before the first shave it is ready to go
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    "No amount of money spent on a Stone can ever replace the value of the time it takes learning to use it properly"
    Very Respectfully - Glen

    Proprietor - GemStar Custom Razors Honing/Restores/Regrinds Website

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  13. #30
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    Default Strop

    I was wondering if you could tell me what sort of strop this is and if it will do for stropping my razor after shaving
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