I am certain there is more to it than that. Whole story was done by Martin a while back and there is considerable on Joseph Turner in the American Knife thread.
He was a badass who knew how to grind!
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Yes, Tom that reminds me now. You and Martin discussed Turner when I found that Heinisch razor with the scissors stamped on the tang.
Here we go! I guess I got SOME of it right! http://straightrazorpalace.com/show-...n-history.html
G-Nite! :chapeau
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I am apparently in FBU mode. I've only got three more behind this one.
Also, I'm just making a lot of scales lately, after a very long time of resenting needing to manually shape the horn with sanders and whatnot, knowing the old Sheffield folk just stuck a slab or horn in a mold. I WANT MOLDS TOO DAMMIT.
Well, I don't have them, so I gotta make scales the hard way.
This set I botched slightly, in a couple different directions.
- I sanded the surfaces before woodgluing the halves together
- I didn't pay attention and the half with the reference image wasn't aligned, so I had to make them about 2mm smaller than spec.
- When I cut them apart, the glue pulled a little horn along with it.
Still, the scales & wedge came out nicely, but then KCB showed me a picture of his in more originalish scales, but a slightly different (larger) style. Right then and there I knew I had to knock out another pair of scales.
Attachment 275749
Now the only problem I have is that this style of scales used a larger domed washer than the standard, later FBU (which Ajkenne made replicas of).
SO, I clearly have no choice but to make a custom washer die, which is what I spent the last hour or so flailing at.
We had a wind shift here again so I'm back under the smoke plume from the fires up north, and it's got my brain a little dull.
Attachment 275750
What I'm doing is:
Cutting a very short section of small steel pipe, filling it with steel-filled epoxy putty, impressing an actual old Sheffield washer into the epoxy, and then swearing.
I have now three times gotten the timing wrong and pressed the washer in too soon, had it stick, then tear chunks out when I pull the washer back out. THREE TIMES I have successfully made perfect impressions in scrap pieces of epoxy putty that is not in the tube, but just laying on some scrap cardboard.
Why does that matter? Because the tube is sturdy enough that I can stick it in a vise.
Tomorrow I'm cutting one of those perfect impressions out, drilling out my last mess, then gluing the perfect impression into the damned tube.
THEN I can try and make washers with this preposterous setup.
Never herd of a wedge O'matic. That would be handy. Do you stick a chunk of lead in it?