Results 11 to 20 of 31
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06-04-2011, 05:12 AM #11
I do not think you made a bad investment. You have a nice looking razor with IMHO one of the coolest handle inlays out there. It is a nice wide blade which seems to be favored by a lot of people. I think it will be a great shaver and you will be a very happy guy. If for some strange reason you do not like it you can always sell it and recoup some of your money to try another razor or have summer entertainment for a couple of months.
Hope you love it
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darkraijin (06-04-2011)
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06-04-2011, 06:19 PM #12
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- Mar 2011
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- miami, FL
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Thanked: 4=D what can i say; Not a pro like many of you guys in world of SR i do so many things at 1 time. ran on gig Bartmaan nothin came up. Msg the seller on bay didnt get back. So i was like "wth" why not. I will try the razor. gettin my 30K grit stone so be fun times while I watch a classic Kurosawa movie and horn away. after few good shaves. I do not have a white scale razor; so for now I will keep this.
I thank all you guys for input. =D
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06-06-2011, 12:09 PM #13
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- Oct 2006
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- 1,898
Thanked: 995I arrived late for this question.
Branding the razor with the word Maganese is, as has already been stated, simply marketing.
Personally, I don't want the stuff in any steel I can get as it affects the heat treatment for what I want to do with the steel. Even as I say that, it has it's purposes and can improve steel for particular functions. It's often found in greater amount in work hardening steels. That was mentioned above.
Manganese ore is found naturally associated with iron ore deposits. It cannot be eliminated from steel during the smelting process unless expensive means are used and those are simply not practical. As a percentage, the steels I like have between 0.3 and 0.5% manganese in them. Just doubling that percentage can make it difficult to achieve features I like to see. A very little Mn has big effects.
I'd bet that blade is a good shaver, marketing and metal mysteries aside, use it.“Nothing discloses real character like the use of power. Most people can bear adversity. But if you wish to know what a man really is, give him power.” R.G.Ingersoll
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darkraijin (06-06-2011)
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06-07-2011, 02:47 AM #14
I hope you didn't pay anything exorbitant for your Bartmann,I have two and bought them because of the name and picture,but I think I didnt pay more than $40 for both of them. The good thing is that they are great shavers,and should serve you well,and as I said there cool looking
Enjoy
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darkraijin (06-07-2011)
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06-07-2011, 10:47 PM #15
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- Mar 2011
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- miami, FL
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- 53
Thanked: 4actually this was 8/8. Price 600. I know not suppose to say it. Hopefully anyone will not make a big deal about it. Well Filamonica is on ebay right now a NOS. So hopefully it be fun times with that one as well ^_^ ....
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06-08-2011, 10:04 AM #16
Well, I don't believe we have heard from anybody who knows more than the original poster about what is in this razor. Not many of gssixgun's names are really complete flim-flam, although one or two are. Crucible and electrically melted steels are good things we take for granted now, but were worth mentioning before they became the norm, and some plain steels did benefit from sub-zero quenching. Mind you, Never Hone sounds like a useful trick if you can do it.
Alloying elements interact with one another in quite complex ways. I think there is every chance that this razor contains something like the 1.00 to 1.4% manganese which is currently used in 01 tool steel. While adding to abrasive resistance, this is also intended to reduce the tendency to warp in hardening, mainly by hardening under the gentler quenching of oil instead of water or brine. That is an extremely valuable quality for a maker of razors, but not much when you have got your completed, non-distorted razor.
It is true that manganese helps to confer abrasion resistance, which sounds good in anything that requires a really sharp edge. A razor also requires to be tough and malleable enough for the edge, which is pretty toothy under enough magnification, to be bent by cutting hair and straightened up by the strop. I think you could make a razor from something much harder (tungsten carbide?) which would be first-class for longer, and yet need rehoning sooner.
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06-08-2011, 10:17 AM #17
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06-08-2011, 10:30 AM #18
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- May 2011
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- Cowra, New South Wales, Australia
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Thanked: 46That's in interesting point. How do people get a razor that wide under their nose without amputating their top lip from the bad angle? This does explain those tiny little Japanese "nose razors" I've seen for sale, though.
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06-08-2011, 11:06 AM #19
Grow moustaches, maybe? I think a lot of the very wide Sheffield wedges date from a time when moustaches were more the norm than they are today. Quite possibly the fashionable gentleman about town, especially if he wanted to eat soup, would have both one of those, and a little 4/4 razor for the upper lip.
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06-08-2011, 11:31 AM #20
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- Mar 2011
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- miami, FL
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- 53
Thanked: 4have few 5/8 ...but ever since i got hooked on 7/8 8/8 and 9/8 ...been with it. I have not so butcher hands (like my pal i cal 16 knuckles in 1 hand) =) .... I did not want the razor to slip out of me hands as far as bartmaan went. That sepefic seller is also selling now a Globusmen 6/8. Quite a hunt but we'll see ^_^