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Thread: Lifting blade from strop
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04-17-2014, 07:07 PM #1
Lifting blade from strop
I slowed way down today during stropping. It helps. What I noticed as I pushed the blade away was that the spine made contact with the strop but I was lifting the blade off of it. So I paid attention with each stroke. Stropped 100 times being careful to note the blade on the strop with each stroke. What a difference. Easily passed the HHT and what a wonderful shave I got from the razor. And I did all of this because of advice here at SRP. Thanks for all the good advice.
It's a good life and someone has got to live it.
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04-17-2014, 07:29 PM #2
Stropping sure does make a huge difference! For the better or the worse.
What a curse be a dull razor; what a prideful comfort a sharp one
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04-18-2014, 12:14 PM #3
Good show, Rusty. Speeding and lifting the blade from the strop invite the folded edge. As for the joys of stropping on a delicious strop, sometimes I go two or three hundred strokes on leather, not because my blades needs it, no, because I get into a zen state and fade away. Stropping is one of my preferred activities in the straight razor world.
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RustySterling (04-18-2014)
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04-18-2014, 12:22 PM #4
Glad it worked. That is the reason I went to using an X stroke even when using a 3 inch strop. It just seems to ensure that some part of my motion or reach doesn't cause a portion of the blade to lift, even microscopically from the strop surface.
Just call me Harold
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A bad day at the beach is better than a good day at work!
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RustySterling (04-18-2014)
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04-18-2014, 06:56 PM #5
I stropped up two more blades yesterday, taking my time and watching the blade to make sure it didn't float up. Both blades passed the HHT. Now I understand that test. Never did before because it never worked for me.
It's a good life and someone has got to live it.
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04-18-2014, 08:01 PM #6
Dat's da way da doit
Nice work. If I'd had know just one thing or two when I started stropping, I wouldn't have destroyed so many strop. Yeah, Rusty.
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RustySterling (04-18-2014)
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04-20-2014, 09:53 PM #7
You know Obie since stropping is your favorite activity why not make it a theme in your next novel?
I can see it now. Following a vintage strop from it's creation in say 1920 through an SRP member today and their life stories and how they might have crossed paths and intermingled without ever knowing it. Maybe the way the strop may have affected their lives like the guy at the factory who while cutting the leather accidentally cut 3 fingers off. if it's a best seller I want a cut though-har har.No matter how many men you kill you can't kill your successor-Emperor Nero
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04-20-2014, 10:00 PM #8
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04-18-2014, 10:11 PM #9
- Join Date
- May 2013
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- Los Angeles South Bay
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Thanked: 284It still takes me a long time to strop. I told myself I was going to commit to flipping the blade between my fingers and not rolling my wrist. I've stick with that- Not as fast but I like it.
I love living in the past...
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04-19-2014, 04:20 AM #10
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Thanked: 3215Speed kills… a strop. I think most stropping problems with novices are from trying to imitate what they have seen in the movies and TV.
Even if you go slow and do a half lap every second, one way, it will only take a minute to do 30 full laps.
Royalcake, try holding alternating corners of the tang between the thumb and forefinger, rolling the tang at the flip like turning a knob.
You can torque the tang a bit to keep the spine or edge on the strop, as opposed to downward pressure.
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The Following User Says Thank You to Euclid440 For This Useful Post:
RoyalCake (04-19-2014)