https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q4dGBb_B_-A
Mike, it's kind of like this but the ones I use get chucked into my cordless drill. I don't see why this couldn't be used either on the disk grinder like here or on a bench grinder.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q4dGBb_B_-A
Mike, it's kind of like this but the ones I use get chucked into my cordless drill. I don't see why this couldn't be used either on the disk grinder like here or on a bench grinder.
have you actually used those things on razors?
I'm wondering the same. I've seen those before, never thought to..
They work?
So I got some horn that is refusing to Cooperate.
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Lets see how a night in the freezer works. 2 times heated with hairdryer clamped and frozen.
1 time boiled clamped and frozen.
Now boiled and twisted and over corrected freeze again.
Ducks without beaks, One more down.
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That warping is the only reason I've been a bit apprehensive about creating horn scales.
Good luck! The others look great!
I don't know about those particular ones, I use the smaller version that fits in a drill. Most hand drills are variable speed and can be sped up or slowed down depending on the need of the moment. I have had no problems doing it this way. I use finer grit paper by hand as I progress to take out the deeper lower grit marks.
Lads just a note on the flap disks, we use these a lot at work for finishing steel jobs, No way in hell would I go anywhere near a razor with a flap disk on a grinder These are usually 60 - 180 grit with high a speed grinder = no more razor real quickThe burr type flap discs used in a drill or rotary burr are also fairly aggressive DIY to low grit ratings 60-180 usually also I very worn out one on low speed in a drill may work but would be only on a heavy blade with heavy damage Also both are flexible when used and don't hold a perminent shape Hope this helps Cheers D