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Thread: Strop Maintenance (Newspaper and bend)

  1. #11
    Senior Member Toroblanco's Avatar
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    Naptha is the active ingridient in lighter fluid that makes it clean so well.
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  2. #12
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    Being a little bit wary of making it worse, I decided to give it the "one week under dictionaries" treatment. It is better, but not quite there yet.
    I've tried the same with the linen, but it is still wavy.
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    I'm a little wary of making the strop wet, honestly, as I got a stain from previous exposure to water.
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    Looks like I'll try Tony Miller's advice. Cross fingers.
    https://mobro.co/13656370

  3. #13
    Senior Member blabbermouth
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    I have never tried to straighten a strop, but I have made a few soft and floppy.

    You have to hydrate the strop by adding water and oil. Dampen a wet sponge and wipe both sides and the edges. Wait 15-20 minutes and add 3-4 drop of neatsfoot or Ballistol to a folded paper towel. Wipe it on to the surface, you may need to add 3-4 drops to each side. Rub it briskly into the leather and hold the oiled cloth pad over spots that need more oil, allow it to absorb. It may look blotchy, but will even out in a few days.

    Ballistol seems to penetrate easier, faster. Some folks don’t like the smell, I do, my bride no. It goes away after a day or so.

    The water will allow the oil to penetrate deep into the strop. Wait about 30 minutes to an hour. Pick up a rolling pin from a thrift store and suspend it from a couple of loops of cord. I used 550 cord and a couple eye bolts attached to the top of my garage door.

    I open the door and hang the rolling pin. Roll the strop, gently begin by just doing a couple of lite rolls on each side. Do not over bend. If you feel it cracking, do another course or water and oil a week later. Do not over oil, add oil slowly and allow at least a week to fully absorb.

    Keep rolling until you can roll the leather on the roller in a full U. If you can not, wait a few days and repeat the whole process, moisture, oil and rolling. It can take a month or 2 to fully hydrate.

    The water and the rolling will allow the oil to deeply penetrate the strop and the leather will eventually become very soft and floppy that can easily be stretched flat. It will also give the strop more draw.

    Depending on the strop and the weather it can take several weeks or a month for the oil to fully penetrate the strop. Even if you do not get even coverage, and it may appear blotchy. The oil will penetrate eventually.

    Rolling also works great for linen and especially firehose. Yea, don’t add oil to the linen, just saying , just in case.

    To remove a water spot, just wet the whole strop with a damp sponge, it will dry to an even color.

    You know, cows get wet, right? Leather is much more resilient than folks think.
    Last edited by Euclid440; 02-13-2019 at 06:25 AM.

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  5. #14
    Senior Member Toroblanco's Avatar
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    After you get it a little hydrated, with a round shaft screwdriver that has been sanded on the shaft to 220-400 grit. As you do not want any imperfections on the shaft(they will leave marks or scratch the surface. Don't ask how I know that! Lol. You can do some of thisName:  20180305_103901.jpg
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  6. #15
    Senior Member blabbermouth
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    Yea, you are kind of doing the same thing as the roller on a smaller scale as well as burnishing the finish.

    The roller I use is a smooth plastic pastry roller with ball bearing in the roller. I on the other hand I want a smooth suede finish, just the slightest of nap. When I strop on it, I can see the nap change directions, like a shadow. I lightly scrape the finished side with a sharp card scraper.

    Rolling with a rolling pin, glass bottle or tool shaft breaks down the fibers and relaxes the leather for a smoother finish and strop consistency.

    My shop strop is an old ¼ inch thick, Certified, Russian Diamond Cut back, that is soft and floppy, it will roll and twist easily yet pull taught and provide a fine finish. I keep it hydrated and well oiled. I wipe it down with a wet sponge every time I use it, almost daily and burnish it with a rough paper towel.

    I buy folded paper towels in bulk the kind you see in bathrooms, I have the same dispenser. They are cheap and have multiple uses in the shop, or just for drying your hands.

    Here’s a pic of the set up and another with a piece of Firehose after repeated rolling. It is soft and floppy. The leather easily bends around the roller.

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  8. #16
    Senior Member Toroblanco's Avatar
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    Naomi-san has a video of his industrial roller. That thing must work quick. Nice addaptation, I will have to try it out. Thanks for sharing!

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    Thanks for the advice. I only have the following oils: mineral, coconut, WD-40, and fluid film. Do you think one will perform better than the others?
    https://mobro.co/13656370

  10. #18
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    With leather strops ive found nothing better than Neatsfoot Oil.. You dont need much because it goes a long way...

  11. #19
    Senior Member blabbermouth
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    Of the four, probably Coconut, but use it sparingly and only on leather that has been hydrated with damp sponge and allowed to absorb, 15-20 minutes, probably a ¼ teaspoon or less.

    You can use Olive oil, some well know leather carver/ saddle makers recommend Olive oil. Buy pure olive oil, that is not a mineral oil blend, read the label, also sparingly 4-5 drops at a time, wait a week or more between applications for fully hydration or you can tear the leather fibers.

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