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    At this point in time... gssixgun's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by jaswarb View Post
    I have seen Glen refer more than once to the Verhoeven paper. This should be required reading for anyone seeking the ultimate edge. Google it.
    When it comes to stropping the Verhoeven paper is all but useless.. great read for honing and edge dynamics

    There is another micrograph study that shows a strop re-alligning the "Fin" after a shave

    There are other reads (not on straight razors) that say that stropping can convex the edge..
    (all those are referring to plain leather)


    Now taking all of those views anyone can see that all three cannot be true, we as straight razor users know from our faces telling us, that stropping does something but we just don't know what..

    There was a time when I tested two conflicting theories on pasted stropping, as one side said too much pasted stroppng created a fragile foil like edge, and the other side said too much pasted stropping would convex the edge.. Again both of these statments cannot be true.. After months of over-stropping and shaving with the same razor my conclusion was neither was true within a usable time frame of the razor, after that IMHO it just doesn't matter ..

    It is my thought that the nearest term for what a strop actually does to an edge is 'Burnish" and even that might not be the perfect word...

    Funny I was going to start a thread on this exact topic with the links to all these papers et all in the stropping forum when I had time next week
    Last edited by gssixgun; 08-22-2012 at 03:06 PM.

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    Senior Member blabbermouth
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    Quote Originally Posted by gssixgun View Post
    When it comes to stropping the Verhoeven paper is all but useless.. great read for honing and edge dynamics
    I have to admit I haven't read it yet (only got it last night) but a woodworker sent it to me asserting that no leather had any abrasive capacity at all, at least none that can be noticed.

    I don't know what the verhoven paper says yet, but I'll find out soon enough. The reason he sent it to me was because I mentioned my horse butt strop (which is just plain 8/9 ounce horse butt strops) knocking the polish off of my razors when it was new, but once it was broken in (and grayed on the surface actually, just a little, despite not being introduced to abrasives) it no longer does that.

    As new, though, the silica (presumably) was so sharp and brash that I could take a shine off of an old japanese barber hone (that was very close to a bright polished edge with no visible scratches) and see little abrasive scratches all over it. As it has settled in now, it will take a dull finisher like a japanese semi finisher and gradually work the dullness off of the bevel until after a couple of weeks the bevel is brightly polished with only remnants of scratches left in it (presume the edge is long since turned to what the leather does to it by the time it gets to that point).

    It leads me to think the following are important before people talk about making a convex edge or pulling some fragile bits out to the edge:
    *what kind of leather is being used
    * how tight is it pulled or stretched
    * is there abrasive, and if so, what particle size
    * how much stropping is done
    * when was the last time an edge was honed

    I would assume that someone could round the bevel with a loose strop and coarse paste intended to take the place of honing, and to some extent the rounding may be a very small % with good technique, I'm sure some still exists. But if such rounding with good technique changes an edge from 17 degrees to 19 degrees effective, nobody will notice, especially if it's gradual. If the strop remains tight in use, even a coarse abrasive should do that much to round an edge, and I can't imagine anything but a coarse abrasive would "pull" a wire edge out to the end of the razor's bevel. One that would subsequently be removed with a fine abrasive and/or stropping.

    What is always left on the edge of my razor is a barely visible edge that you can tell has been hit by a strop. IF the edge is in even decent condition after a hone before I get to that point, if I can see that faint uniform evidence of the horse butt doing its job, I know the razor will be a comfortable shave. If the edge isn't quite as good (like say off of a japanese stone that isn't quite as fine as I'd like to use) I might do 200 strops on the horse butt instead of 50 - which out of laziness I hate to do, but it proves something to my curiosity.

    But this is all just my perspectve on it, and it's a lot of talk for something that is trivial in person. The part that makes it trivial, and leads me back to the thing that comes to my mind the most about things that used to be common and hardly discussed when they were widely used vs. things that are brought back on forums. That thing is that most people lack experience, and the experience does not need to provide that the subtleties that you find that will work well can be easily communicated. You just need to accumulate the experience so that you know what works and what causes problems. Figuring out how to communicate what it is exactly you do (if anyone even wants to hear it) can come second or never.

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