Results 31 to 40 of 88
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02-10-2022, 06:08 AM #31
This place is full of experienced and benevolent members. You were criticised because we wanted to help you, not to make you feel bad. Looking at the pictures and video again I suspect that you roll the edge when stropping by the combination of pressure and slack. My suspicion is that you created a rolled edge, AKA a wire edge that manages to catch the hair and cut it. However the edge is not sharp enough to cut a piece of toilet paper.
Most members here would not be satisfied with such an edge, would want a sharper edge. However we have had members before breadknifing the edge to slightly dull the edge and get a better shave.
What we teach here is what always works with every good quality razor, stone and strop. My suspicion is that your technique works this time but won't work time and again, sort of beginner's luck.
At the end of the day there's only one thing that counts: if you get satisfying shaves honing and stropping your razor the way you do it, that's great. Enjoy your shaves. If you manage to keep your razor shaving well and don't have to hone it after each shave you are doing a great job and we were dead-wrong.
If you continue to strop the way you do with the amount of slack your vid shows, my recommendation would be you put approx. 99.9% of the pressure on the spine of the razor and not to push the edge against the strop too much.
BTW IMHO you do not need a leather strop. Linen only works great IME. But many here will not agree with this.Last edited by Kees; 02-10-2022 at 06:25 AM.
Plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose. Jean-Baptiste Alphonse Karr.
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02-10-2022, 06:20 AM #32
I know that my usage is different from the traditional, but not every linen strop, different materials will have different results? Once I thought of this problem, I tested it several times, and the results are some razors such as the video, the edge of my razor does not have a dull edge, but Aren't we in normalcy, some things have some results in different ways? And the toilet paper test, which passes when the edge is smooth, doesn't cut, and the HHT also passes, I'd say in the three months of the test, I know it's The way I want. Whether you want to use this way or not, the world is free, many anomalies are mostly wrong, and the way you haven't used it may result in different people.
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02-10-2022, 12:16 PM #33
This time I tested it with fine hair.
Last edited by TMILO; 02-11-2022 at 02:11 AM.
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02-10-2022, 02:06 PM #34
- Join Date
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Thanked: 5
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02-10-2022, 02:26 PM #35
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02-10-2022, 03:00 PM #36
I do not hone as a pro.
And I can do an HHT and pop hairs all over the edge and still have an edge not to the level i enjoy to shave with. Ive learned over the years that HHT is a test that lets me know Im getting close.It's just Sharpening, right?
Jerry...
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02-10-2022, 03:13 PM #37
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02-11-2022, 03:53 AM #38
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- Duluth, GA - Atlanta OTP North
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Thanked: 315TMILO
I'm interested in those old wooden handle razors. Where was it made? How does it shave?- Joshua
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02-11-2022, 04:08 AM #39
This is probably a razor from around 1900, the type of Chinese razor at that time. The heat treatment of the steel is also razor-conditioned. At that time, the beauty of this kind of forging could not be compared with that of Europe and the United States, and the way of use was similar to that of the Kamisori Japanese straight shaver, but the difference was that the blade was FAUX FRAMEBACK left-handed or right-handed. Wood handle tail ball type, probably Indian razor, not recommended.
Possibly engraved "Knife King Seventy,"刀子王 七十"
Last edited by TMILO; 02-11-2022 at 09:32 AM.
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JP5 (02-11-2022)
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02-11-2022, 04:23 AM #40
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- Feb 2015
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- Duluth, GA - Atlanta OTP North
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Thanked: 315Thanks for the additional pictures! That answers my question about the grind.
"Wooden handle tail bulb, probably Indian razor, not recommended"
Sorry, can you elaborate?- Joshua