Looks super, Steve! Funny how the pattern in one side of something makes it look bigger than the other when they are the same size! No worries! As-pinned, you can only see one side at a time!
Should turn up a treat! :tu
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Looks super, Steve! Funny how the pattern in one side of something makes it look bigger than the other when they are the same size! No worries! As-pinned, you can only see one side at a time!
Should turn up a treat! :tu
Yeah thanks Tom. I think I'm done on the belt sander for now & should start my sanding progressions because once sanded, they will get thinner.
Be certain to post pics along the way, Steve! Mockups, etc.
We needs to see! ;)
Okie dokie Tom, sure will!
Well guys, I mocked it up & the blade doesn't center just right but it looks like it when it is open but as I close it it goes more to one side. I held it up sideways at the light & it looked like the blade is bent at the tang so I took it apart & held a straight edge on each side & one side shows a gap while the other side hardly shows any gap. I guess when that blade got broken it took a devastating blow. I will get the chance to use Charlie Lewis's (spazola) tang straightening method with the heat block paste which I have some for the Barbersori also. I should be able to put the blade in my vise, with has some homemade soft jaws I made out of angle aluminum, & apply some paste, heat it up & straighten it. The blade also doesn't want to pivot so freely in wood so i took some brass spacer washers which are .017" thickness & I hammered them on my old anvil until they were around .008". I then had to drill the holes back out & I de-burred them on a DMT which made them .006" thin.
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So Steve.....Lots of other ways to center blades in scales. Just gonna do the paste and torch, or perhaps try something else first? :shrug:
To clean jimps I use a worn 600 grit greaseless wheel with most of the grit worn off. It works great for removing all the rust and gunk and leaves them gleaming. Then hit it with a Chrome Oxide wheel to make them shine.
600 greaseless is the grit I use most. I keep 4 wheels in rotation in various degree of load from full to almost none. A well worn wheel is great for shining up a razor that just need some cleaning. It will not leave any deep scratches and a bit of greased compound like Chrome Oxide will bring out the color after 600.
Don’t know if it would work with cotton Dremel wheel, might.