Hi Wat is the best way to get rid of spider rust and pitting
On a razor I am restoring
hand sand/ bench polish
both
any.help much we'll come
robert
Hi Wat is the best way to get rid of spider rust and pitting
On a razor I am restoring
hand sand/ bench polish
both
any.help much we'll come
robert
Good photos first and then members can advise.
Okay
will try tomorrow is a 4 of. Clock start for me so in the afternoon
will try then
I have about 15 of them
many thanks
bobby66
Nice straight razors.....
Well first off.... sanding. Start at a higher grit and see what happens. The lower the grit, the more aggressive it will on the blade. Also leaves deeper marks. That's why I said start at a higher grit and work down if needed. Take your time and work it until you like what you are seeing.
:gl:
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It is most likely that you will have to do some sanding. You can clean them first with steel wool or a single edge razor blade and get some of the major gunk off first. I think that all those razors have some serious issues except the small full hollow. I trust by the question that these are your first project. They are not very good beginner projects. The larger hollow ground need to have a bevel set before you put very much work in to it because of the level of rust at the bevel on the back side. It needs to be ground back far enough to find good steel. Two of the frame backs have geometry issues and will be difficult for you to asses and repair at this point. The outside frame back looks to be fairly rusty and will also need a bevel set before you do much with it. See if you can get the small hollow ground leaned up with some 000 steel wool and WD-40. It is likely your best candidate for recovery.
Start with steel wool and metal polish and see where you get. You might be surprised. The heavier red rust will need some wet/dry sandpaper
Follow the above advice on the steel wool, and then start with 600 or 800 grit wet/dry silicon carbide paper. I personally sand wet, it seems to work faster because the water prevents the paper from loading as fast. Be very careful around the edge of the blade while sanding, even a dull razor can and will give you a wicked cut if you are not careful! (I know this from experience...)
Remember to be patient and get all of the scratches out from the lower grits before moving up, it will take you an hour plus to finish one blade. I would start with the one that says hollow grind on the blade. Be aware that you might be doing this work for nothing- if there is pitting that is deep the razor might be shot because of the thin metal of a hollow grind.
Have fun, projects are great for rainy days like today here in Texas. I will be starting back on mine shortly:)