Quite good! Sings a nice song. Tested the heel and it shaved close the entire edge. I went straight to the Escher after the 8k. May have refined it a bit on the 12k before. Not disappointed at all.
Only gonna get better with the strop! ;)
Printable View
Have the drawing finished for the scales, now to cout out, and transfer to thin cardboard , like a cereal box.
That will be my pattern to transfer to wood.
Does anyone do it this way?
Explain, comments welcome. This is how we learn from each other.
Attachment 209925
I have never made scales, but that seems to be the way. If I may, I always like to see the end as close to the wedge as possible. Maybe about halfway across those 2 lines?
Purely an aesthetic thing.
Exactly. I like to cut a little large, then sand and shape, for better fit.
You can always sand or cut it off ,but its hell to put back on.
The whole product looks better with minimum clearance at the wedge end. But!
Something to do is swing an arc with a drawing compass from the pivot to the tip of the toe bevel upward. That may save having to file the wedge if it is too close to the opening blade. I learned that one the hard way. A material that will shrink over time can need a lot more blade clearance at the wedge than a modern acrylic. I have had modern purchased horn shrink almost an 8th in length over a year's time. Sometimes it will swell in length. I have read that the old horn scales were heat formed and so were somewhat immune to atmospheric humidity problems. I have some router cut horn scales from back when that do a dance through humidity changes.
~Richard
Yep Mike, she was something special. :dropjaw:
Back to the butchered Razor.....
I've been quite busy with some other issues here at home & i saw this earlier & have spent the last few hours reading all these posts. I have a W&B blade that is cracked at the heel & I wish it didn't have any stabilizers on it but I'm going to be doing a project with it soon. Great work guys, especially you Tom, you did a fantastic job on that straight. Here's the blade I need to grind the heel out of:
Attachment 209934