Results 41 to 50 of 86
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01-18-2024, 01:51 AM #41
Yeah, good razors from them also. Really any American razors from the very late 1800s to the early (pre WWII but mainly pre WWI) 1900s is usually pretty good BUT especially from that Little Valley-Rochester-Olean-Geneva trapazoid.
You know some pretty good stuff came out of Worcester Mass also. Also Shumate in St Louis is a contender. I love that Tungsten and Tungsteel series.Last edited by PaulFLUS; 01-18-2024 at 01:55 AM.
Iron by iron is sharpened, And a man sharpens the face of his friend. PR 27:17
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01-18-2024, 01:52 AM #42
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01-18-2024, 06:30 AM #43
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01-18-2024, 06:44 AM #44
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Thanked: 0Your assertion definitely stands. I wasn't thinking much before buying it, just wanted a super hard razor, that's all about it. I've no means to evaluate its exact HRC but for sure it's much harder than my Dovos and Boker, which are as you mentioned most likely 58~61 HRC, and thus should be much brittle too. I did not really use it much as I don't like the ground at all, but I do suspect it chips easily.
Put all that aside, it's painful to hone, especially when the geometry wasn't right at the beginning. My S30K simply cannot cut it, or at least cannot cut it at reasonable speed and that's why I could hardly see any swarfs. I had actually to use diamond strop to bring up the edge to my standard. I don't see that's an advantage neither, as I stopped using diamond strops for quite a while before this.
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01-18-2024, 06:45 AM #45
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01-18-2024, 06:48 AM #46
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01-18-2024, 11:01 AM #47
I was reading back through some of the posts in this thread and this one I guess I didn't notice before. Anyway, it prompted more thoughts.
1) a scything stroke is not harder on the skin. In fact it is a method meant to keep from using more strokes by maximizing the blades contact with the hair at each pass. It is not horizontal, not vertical in relation to the hair it is more diagonal so the blade cuts rather than hacks the hair. It took me a while to get that stroke and it seems wrong to do since you spend most of your learning in NOT slicing yourself. But that is what you are doing, slicing thought the hair, just in a.way that doesn't slice the skin. If you have sensitive skin and can't use too many strokes a scything stroke would help you. It is ,if not the main purpose, the main advantage of a.smiling blade.
2)In your particular case that Titan razor may just not be crafted well but a blade with a complex geometry may not need to be "fixed" necessarily. Typically a smiling blade would have a corresponding smile to the spine but it doesn't have to. You can craft a blade that looks like this
That blade would need a spine shaped like this...
...to get it to hone maintaining a consistent bevel angle. Otherwise it would be too obtuse (IF the edge would even touch the hone) at the ends and not shave well while being too acute in the center and tend to chip. That is even assuming that you knew HOW to hone it in the first place. Most of us would not want a blade like the drawing because it is not pleasing to the eye. Also, it is too complex for the layman to hone so anyone who makes blades would tend to not send that out into the public. You would hone that with a rocking stroke where the edge at the heel contacts the stone at the first part of the stroke but the edge at the toe does not. At the other end of the stroke that would be reversed. This is more easily done with a very narrow stone but it is not necessary. You learn to hone on the first inch or two of the hone to achieve this.
Forgive me if I over explain. I'm not sure where you are in your honing experience. Honing is one of those puzzles that seems easy to solve at the surface as is understanding blade geometry. Once you get some time into it you discover that the puzzle is more complex than it seems. Actually the puzzle itself is not but understanding it fully is. I don't mean to condescend but it is easy to look at the puzzle on the surface and miss the complexity.Last edited by PaulFLUS; 01-18-2024 at 05:49 PM.
Iron by iron is sharpened, And a man sharpens the face of his friend. PR 27:17
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01-18-2024, 02:16 PM #48
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Thanked: 43Links did not work Paul!
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01-18-2024, 05:44 PM #49
Dang it. I've seen other posts where that happened also recently
Iron by iron is sharpened, And a man sharpens the face of his friend. PR 27:17
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01-18-2024, 05:49 PM #50
There. Hopefully that fixed it.
ThanksIron by iron is sharpened, And a man sharpens the face of his friend. PR 27:17