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    At this point in time... gssixgun's Avatar
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    Not sure where you are at in MT but we have a fairly good group of guys up here in the PNW and INW there might be some of us fairly close that we could meet over a Beer or a cup of Coffee and give some help
    "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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    ~ Life is but a Dream ~ petercp4e's Avatar
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    Hello and welcome to SRP.
    As Glen says, a very wise decision on your part would be to meet with any willing and experienced members. A chance to do this will dramatically help.
    Enjoy the learning experience and your time here on the forum.

    Pete <:-}
    "Life is short, Break the Rules. Forgive quickly, Kiss Slowly,
    Love truly, Laugh uncontrollably, And never regret ANYTHING
    That makes you smile." - Mark Twain

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    Junior Member mtwoodwrkr's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by petercp4e View Post
    Hello and welcome to SRP.
    As Glen says, a very wise decision on your part would be to meet with any willing and experienced members. A chance to do this will dramatically help.
    Enjoy the learning experience and your time here on the forum.



    Pete <:-}
    Thanks Pete, I appreciate your wisdom and willingness to extend a hand.
    Larry

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    Senior Member blabbermouth ScoutHikerDad's Avatar
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    Welcome to SRP-I envy you: Montana is the prettiest state in America in my book. Did you get the razor from SRD too? If so, it would have been shave ready. Maybe an experienced member who lives in your (admittedly very large!) neighborhood could assess your edge, your stropping, even your shave itself, to see if you are doing things correctly. There are many variable that can mess up a straight shave, especially until you have enough experience under your belt to know what messed it up.

    If you were getting good shaves in that first week and a half but are having difficulty maintaining edges via stropping (edge declining with each shave), it is probably something you are doing wrong in the stropping: maybe too much pressure? Or have an experienced honer assess your edge and maybe re-finish it has been dulled. Let us know how it turns out. Aaron

    edit: Okay, you posted while I was typing, and answered my main question. If you got a shave-ready razor honed by Lynn, then your problem is most likely your stropping, as no edge should degrade that fast if used carefully. If you've really dulled it, it may need some refinishing on an 8 or 12k stone, or as Sixxgun said, if you can find one of the many members in that region for help, he may be able to show you how to strop it back into shape if not too far gone.
    Last edited by ScoutHikerDad; 07-23-2017 at 12:37 AM.
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  5. #5
    Junior Member mtwoodwrkr's Avatar
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    gssixgun, that sounds great to me, if we are close enough. I live in the SouthWest Montana area between Deer Lodge and Butte, just off the I-90 corridor.
    Larry

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    Senior Member Longhaultanker's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by mtwoodwrkr View Post
    gssixgun, that sounds great to me, if we are close enough. I live in the SouthWest Montana area between Deer Lodge and Butte, just off the I-90 corridor.
    Larry
    I will be in Butte, MT Tuesday evening for a Wednesday delivery. I'm agreeable to holding over a few hours Wednesday if you want to meet. Got my travel kit with me too. PM me if you're interested.
    A little advice: Don't impede an 80,000 lbs. 18 wheeler tanker carrying hazardous chemicals.

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    Senior Member blabbermouth ejmolitor37's Avatar
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    One thing that really can effect stropping is strop tension. It should be taught but not tight, you don't want your arm to be tired from holding your strop. Second not slack, slack can kill an edge quickly. There are guys that can strop on a slack strop but that is years of doing so. Eddy has given you some great advice, laying your strop on a flat surface will help tremendously taking almost all variable out. What really helped me was hearing the term "bury the spine". By no means dig the spine into the strop or again you will kill the edge, bury the edge thought giving a slight deflection to the strop with each stroke. I hope you enjoy your journey, there is a lot to learn but in the end it will all come together and be very rewarding

    PS, I forgot to add, listen to the sound that is made when stropping. Put just the spine of your razor on the strop so the edge is straight in the air, no flipping or anything. Perform a stropping motion, notice how quiet it is? Now lay the entire blade down as you would to strop normally and make a stropping motion, notice the sound it makes? Almost like zip,zip,zip,zip. This will give you an idea when you are stropping if you are lifting the edge or doing something that is not getting the entire blade in contact. Hope this helps
    Last edited by ejmolitor37; 07-23-2017 at 01:26 PM.
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  10. #8
    Junior Member mtwoodwrkr's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by ejmolitor37 View Post
    One thing that really can effect stropping is strop tension. It should be taught but not tight, you don't want your arm to be tired from holding your strop. Second not slack, slack can kill an edge quickly. There are guys that can strop on a slack strop but that is years of doing so. Eddy has given you some great advice, laying your strop on a flat surface will help tremendously taking almost all variable out. What really helped me was hearing the term "bury the spine". By no means dig the spine into the strop or again you will kill the edge, bury the edge thought giving a slight deflection to the strop with each stroke. I hope you enjoy your journey, there is a lot to learn but in the end it will all come together and be very rewarding

    PS, I forgot to add, listen to the sound that is made when stropping. Put just the spine of your razor on the strop so the edge is straight in the air, no flipping or anything. Perform a stropping motion, notice how quiet it is? Now lay the entire blade down as you would to strop normally and make a stropping motion, notice the sound it makes? Almost like zip,zip,zip,zip. This will give you an idea when you are stropping if you are lifting the edge or doing something that is not getting the entire blade in contact. Hope this helps
    Good advice! I like it when I can get immediate feedback to help determine a fault, and set on the right path to correcting the fault.
    Thank you.
    Larry
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