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  1. #11
    Senior Member blabbermouth hi_bud_gl's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by STS View Post
    Ok, I think I'm getting to the point where I'm pretty much stumped.
    I bought a Wade and Butcher that was advertised in shave-ready condition, and when it arrived it was anything but.
    Rather than send it back to be re-honed, I'm taking this as an opportunity to learn how to hone myself.
    I bought a Norton 4/8K combo stone and have been trying to learn everything that I can off the wiki and the videos.
    The first go round was with pyramids, starting at 25/25 and going down to 1/7 - no results. Today watched one of the other videos on the wiki, and decided to just go to down on the 4K side and did 1000 laps or so, and the razor seems to me nearly as dull as ever, and absolutely will not cut arm hair. At this point my plan is just to keep working on my technique, and keep hitting the 4K side hard, and see if I can get anywhere with it before moving on to the 8 and CrOx. Any other suggestions?
    I hope you realize what you are trying to do is not right way to go.
    You have bought your blade shave ready condition.Doesn't matter from whom you bought(even it may be myself) you must contact to that person and tell him about your problem.
    May be person made some mistake i am not sure what could be? But this is a life and no one is perfect.
    Please do contact to the seller and let him know.
    ( i will tell you example. 1 member send me 2 razors to sharpen. 1 was rare razor another one was common dovo. i sharpened both(this is what i thought) and asked someone else to package and ship(i had bad news and need to deal with it). owner got razor and send me email that dovo is exactly how it was before. next razor was shave ready. i asked and paid for both ways for dovo send me the razor back. he send me back and he was right. Question how in the world i made such a mistake? i did sharpen the blade? yes indeed i did but wasn't his dovo but another persons dovo. same darn name and brand.? of course i sharpen his razor and send him back. he was happy with the results.)
    i have nothing against you to learn hone the razor yourself. Just the way you are trying to is wrong.
    you need to buy couple ebay junks and learn how to hone. after that go head hone your original razors. In this case you will make less damage to your blades.
    hope this helps. gl

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  3. #12
    Scale Maniac BKratchmer's Avatar
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    What I'll put forward for your consideration is that, in useable condition, a Wade & Butcher, or any vintage razor, is of a finite supply... there will be no more made, and the razor you hold (and intend to damage...) is irreplaceable.

    Because of this antique quality of vintage razors, they are inherently *more* valuable than any modern production razor, even if you pay less currency for them. Screw up a new DOVO beyond repair? (hard to do...) Buy a new one. Ruin a W&B? Sorry, no more left.

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  5. #13
    Seudo Intellectual Lazarus's Avatar
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    Originally posted by AFDavis11:
    1000 passes on 4K? I'd apply tape and get to work
    I will cheerfully acknowledge I know next to nothing about honing. But my recent experience may be on point. I also recently acquired a wedge W&B in terrible shape. I put 2 layers of tape on the spine thinking that might be efficacious since it was a wedge, did a pyramid starting at 25 strokes on a Norton 4000/8000, polished on a Chinese 12k, polished some more with about 50 laps on a TI paddle strop with TI paste, and then stropped some more on a latigo strop. The razor shaves very, very well. That could be just dumb luck more than skill but I thought my experience might be of some relevance here.
    Last edited by Lazarus; 03-18-2010 at 06:05 PM.

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  7. #14
    STS
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    Thanks again everyone; really good points I'm still at it, but without great results. Tape has helped, so it seems to be some kind of geometry problem (I realized that it's not a full wedge), combined with a smiling edge. It will still barely cut arm hair. Probably I need to go with the suggestions to get it professionally re-honed.

  8. #15
    Maq
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    Default Picture is worth a thousand words

    I've been told on this and other forums that a picture is worth a 1000 words... I'm much to knew at this to give advice.. other than to say.. maybe you could send a picture... Wade / Buthcher made all kinds... maybe this one is ok to learn on or... maybe you should be using a different blade to practice and learn on... A picture of your blade will tell the story and help these folks give you the correct advice.

    Best of luck.. learning to hone... you'll get it.. Maq

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  10. #16
    STS
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    Sorry for not responding for a while to that last post. Attached are some pictures of the razor.

    In the second one you can clearly see what looks to me like two different bevels. I thought I was getting somewhere using tape, but the last time I tried the marker test I couldn't get the marker off at all, and you can actually still see a thin line of it in the second picture. I'm trying a 45 degree angle as well as a rolling X stroke, and still don't seem to be making much progress.

    thanks again to all for the helpful advice.
    Attached Images Attached Images   

  11. #17
    They call me Mr Bear. Stubear's Avatar
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    It looks from the pictures like theres more wear in the centre of the spine than the edges? And the edge seems to be wearing more in the middle and the heel than it does on the toe? It looks like you are using far too much pressure from the wear thats showing, which will make it harder to get a good edge as well as wearing the razor down. The uneven wear may also indicate uneven pressure on the razor as you hone.

    What was the hone wear like when you got the razor by the way?

    What I'd do is put two (or even three) layers of tape on the spine and set an initial bevel on the razor. Do the marker test to make sure you have good contact all the way along the edge, and it may also be useful to get a loupe to keep an eye on how the edge is progressing. I have a W&B wedge and this really helped me get a good bevel set..!

    Try doing circles as well as the X stroke to get the bevel set. Watch to make sure you are getting good contact along the whole edge of the razor and not just on one part.

    Once the initial bevel is set, put one layer of tape on the spine and set a true bevel and then hone on from there.

    I do also agree with Benjamin though. There are only a finite number of W&B's out there, and it would be better to send this one off to a pro and have it usable. Then I'd get a base level production razor and learn to hone on that. That way it doesnt matter if you wear it out as you can always get another..!

    Good luck and keep us posted!

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  13. #18
    The Great & Powerful Oz onimaru55's Avatar
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    From your pics looks like not much belly left in that blade .
    Are you getting hone marks on the base of the stabiliser ? It is thicker than the rest of the blade & may lift part of your edge off the stone.
    The white gleam of swords, not the black ink of books, clears doubts and uncertainties and bleak outlooks.

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  15. #19
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    Default Desperate measures needed?

    Hi STS
    Another beginner here- My second razor was a Nowill & Co wedge circa 1900-although my razor does not have a smile i managed to put a very sharp edge on the blade by holding the razor on the hone (10k - only hone i had at the time) with both hands and dragging it back towards me at about a 30/40 degree angle using light but firm pressure, spine first then turn it over and do the same again.
    I do not know if this damaged my hone or even whether it is goog practice but the results were astonishing.All dings disappeared after only 5 strokes each side and a glorious edge appeared by magic.Next apply electrical tape to the spine X2 layers and hone on lowest grit till arm hairs pop off!
    Leave the tape on and polish on highest grit hone for around 10/20/laps.You may have to adapt this to accomodate your smiling edge but you also might save alot of time as these wedges can be notoriously askew at both spine and edge.Its just the way they are forged!
    by the way i must have done hundreds of laps to no avail before taking this measure.
    Hope this helps .
    regards
    Noggs

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    STS (04-17-2010)

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