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Thread: Strop Width Question
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07-07-2011, 11:30 PM #1
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Thanked: 44Strop Width Question
Anybody know why the old strops from the era when straight razors were commonly used were 2" wide ? It can't be because 3" leather was too expensive - leather was common (and therefore cheap) compared to today. I don't think it was a cupping problem, since 2.5" wide D-rings were available in the 1800's too. So there must have been another reason...
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07-08-2011, 12:14 AM #2
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Thanked: 46Don't confuse common and cheap. Strops were typically a lifetime purchase and would probably have cost just as much, relatively speaking, as they do now if not more. Shoes for example were far more expensive.
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07-08-2011, 02:03 PM #3
Maybe, in the days before air conditioning, when humidity and heat varied widely, the narrower width leathers gave fewer problems?
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07-08-2011, 02:54 PM #4
And much, much better made. They weren't made to be disposable.
I think it WAS to reduce cupping. Even on a d-ring a wide strop can cup. It took some of our best minds here to develop 3" strops that won't cup and even if I were one to use 3" strops there are only a couple of sources currently available that I would trust to make my 3" strop.
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07-08-2011, 02:57 PM #5
I prefer strops narrower than 3 inches. Possibly, fewer problems with cupping combined with the fact that 2 inch strops are just fine was a winning combination.
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07-08-2011, 09:13 PM #6
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Thanked: 4942The majority of the vintage strops I have run into over the past 35 years have been 2 1/2 inches which seems to have been the standard going back in time. I swore I would never use anything else until Don had me try a 3 inch strop and after the first couple weeks with it, that has been my mainstay. I have never had any problems with 3 inch strops cupping although I have seen a couple cup over the years. Very rare and usually when not stored hanging. Cupping seems to be weird in any case. I have seen a 2 1/2 Roo strop cup and so far not a 3 inch Roo. Good thing about those is that the leather is thin and when you pull it taught, it still works very well. Most of the older stuff that I have run across that is less than 2 1/2 has been on paddles. The two inch strops have been, in my opinion, a more recent width primarily aimed at expense saving. Nothing wrong with them. Personal preference still plays a large part with strops both in width and in draw.
Have fun,
Lynn
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07-14-2011, 01:45 AM #7
I am only a beginner but it was my understanding that if the strop is less than 3 inches in width, say 2 inch to 2.5 inches it necessitates a more diagonal/lateral movement (The X pattern) to cover the razors edge and thereby adjusting out any variances in your stropping ability.
So using this X pattern technique would wear the edge more evenly and thereby less likely to develop a frowning edge as can develop if one is to honeing in a perfectly horizontal straight line also.
Perhaps our forefathers were adopting the X pattern; in this case a 3 inch strop was not necessary so was not made.
If one has a 3 inch strop as a first strop and not experienced in stropping in the X pattern and therefore stropping in a perfectly straight line they may discover the problems I have mentioned above.
This is the main and number one reason I have a strop a little over 2 inches so I had no choice but to practice and become experienced at performing the X pattern.
I am only a beginner so please correct me if I am mistaken and this is not the case.Last edited by planetocean; 07-14-2011 at 01:59 AM.