Results 11 to 20 of 27
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01-20-2015, 12:00 PM #11
Once you get her cleaned up you will be shocked at how nice its going to look. Take your time and do it as advised, you should post pics once you get her cleaned and honed.
Some of the best straights I found didnt look shiny when I first got them. Time and elbow grease will erase years of crud/patina and you will have the pride of knowing that you did it yourself. Should be good to go for another 50 years give or take.Your only as good as your last hone job.
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01-21-2015, 08:15 AM #12
Well I tried a shaved with it, after disinfecting and touching it up with the barber hone(s) and paste as described above. Very different feel on the face with that heavy and thick blade. It got a comfortable shave but not a very close shave. Totally new experience.
I assume it will benefit from a proper honing and then I need to adjust my technique for the blade. I finished with a 2nd / touch up pass using a stand by no-name vintage blade.
Will run it on the hones (Norton 1, 4, 8k and c12k) this weekend and give it another go. If time permits I'll start removing the patina. May want to replace the scales too, they are a little rough but that can wait. One project at a time
Thanks for all the input. I'm pretty excited to see how it shaves and cleans up. I'm loving the feel of that big o' blade in the hand and on the face.Last edited by stove; 01-22-2015 at 05:11 AM.
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01-24-2015, 07:56 AM #13
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01-24-2015, 08:11 AM #14
If the scales aren't trashed, put some neatsfoot oil on them & let it sit, then polish them with a rag. If they're rough, sand them & put some neatsfoot oil on them. You can also sand them & polish them up sometimes & they'll look good again. I like to bring old scales back to life as long as they aren't trashed like bug bitten or broken. Even if they have a crack in them, they can be fixed. You can get some shavings & dye them & mix with glue & fill in the cracks & sand them back down & polish them. If they are even broken, you can use CA & put them back together again & sand them & polish them up. There's more you can do to save old scales..........
Last edited by engine46; 01-25-2015 at 12:12 AM.
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The Following User Says Thank You to engine46 For This Useful Post:
stove (01-24-2015)
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01-24-2015, 06:45 PM #15
Well, I wont be getting a job in photography or starting my own Razor restoration business anytime soon, but here is what it looks like today:
Not the prettiest razor, but she does give a DFS. Really different experience compared to my other razors. Makes very little noise and the weight of the blade really makes easy work of a day's whiskers. Almost a BBS shave.
I left the blade over night in a case tumbler with polish, scrubbed it with WD40 and 000 steel wool, MAAS and steel wool, sanded with 600, 1000 and 1500 grain and then lightly polished it with a dremel and MAAS again. Could probably get it a little better but don't want to do any more damage to the blade etching.
Honed it (norton 1, 4, 8k, c12k) and stropped it on a Crox pasted strop and then a 3" latigo strop.
All in all Im pretty happy. It's a great shaver.
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01-24-2015, 06:56 PM #16
Engine46,
Thanks for the Neatsfoot oil tip. I was going through my inventory of gun stock oils trying to find something that wasn't toxic to try. Was about to give tuttle wax a gp, but it's soaking in the Neatsoot oil now.
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01-24-2015, 08:06 PM #17
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01-24-2015, 08:16 PM #18
I think I will. They are growing on me.
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01-25-2015, 11:54 AM #19
Nice work. How did the scales turn out? I find neatsfoot oil works like magic on old horn.
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01-25-2015, 07:52 PM #20
The scales shined up a bit and look a lot better. I plan on giving it another treatment of neatsfood oil next weekend.