I have used the new Birchwood Casey- Super Blue (there is a difference in them) on a few tangs with very good sucess... I haven't tried it on the whole razor but I don't see why it wouldn't work...
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I have used the new Birchwood Casey- Super Blue (there is a difference in them) on a few tangs with very good sucess... I haven't tried it on the whole razor but I don't see why it wouldn't work...
Hey guys long time. no post.
The interesting thing I found with bluing a whole blade is the forgiveness in the finish. Don't get me wrong, preparation is everything, BUT, Bluing can take a bad blade and make it usable.
What I mean and from my experience is that I had an old Bengall that I just knew I could not get to a nice mirror finish due to an even coat of rust and a lot of manual labor. I suppose I could have saved it if I wanted to lose alot of blade size and thickness, but decided another route. I went with cold blueing.
After a good first soak, the blueing actually took off the layer of rust and left me with a nice even steel finish. This was after a rinse and light sanding of 600. I did that 2 more times and a final dip and had a nice smooth, blue finish.
I can only assume that the chemical mixture to blueing removes some metal (surface) as it works. Myself, I would not do it with a razor that could be brought back to mirror luster, but I would do it to one that could be salvaged as "usable".
As an aside, it is one of my finest shavers, but thats because it is a Bengall, not because it is blued. :D. I'm glad I saved it.
-Jerry
Hey Kilowattkid ~ welcome back.
I've done a few Bengalls with Perma blue paste also.
Polishing them back with some metal polish gives a nice grey patina effect without all the acid bath process.
The Super Blue sounds good.