Thanks Mike.
Printable View
New work boots incoming.
https://www.shoesforcrews.com/sfc3/i...artnumber=8100
At just over a year, my current pair have been rode hard & put away wet every time I put them on. I move with enough "gusto" at work to drift around corners... and yes, they are slip-resistant/non-slip!! They went on sale recently, so I got two pairs for just under $100 before shipping.
Ordered Monday, shipped Wednesday, and it has already made it to Indy. I suspect it will be here today or tomorrow.
I may dissect my freshly retired pair for the steel toes. But... in their current state, that might not require a lot of effort lol!
Attachment 241223
Attachment 241224
Suminagashi and SC145 steel from Belgium.
I just got my Zulu grey today! I ordered a 10× 3× 1 full slab and got a 11.5x3x7/8 monster. Can't wait to lap it and try it.http://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/2016...c77d08b7ea.jpg
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G935A using Tapatalk
Franklin C. Co., Germany~That was a trademark used by Tracy-Wells Company in Columbus, OH in 1939. I got that from the Goins Encyclopedia of Cutlery markings. It does not say how long they were selling this razor or anymore information other than they also used a trademark "Franklin 230" & any knives with that mark were made by Schrade Cutlery so the razors were most likely produced by a good company. I haven't seen a junk razor from Germany yet.
Congrats Aaron. Love my ZG finisher on the razors it's encountered.
Lapping on mine was almost moot as Michael did a bang up job on the lapping prior to shipment.
Go easy at the beginning as it may not need much.
Pencil grids will be your friend on that one.
Enjoy!
Hone Lapping 101 - Straight Razor Place Library
Great read to learn from above. Helped me immeasurably.
Cutting a sanding belt, depending on grit might work but doesn't give a lot of surface area for figure 8'ing the stone while lapping.
I'd personally get some good 8x11 sheets of hi grit (1000k+) wet dry 3M paper and go the countertop route to determine how far it's off before going down to triple digit grit levels. Takes a long time to get the final finish back once you start scratching that hard Afrikan rock..
You did well getting the longer stone. Less strokes=less chances to frak up your edge.
:beer1: