anyone try using stainless steel as a wedge material? i have some scrap pieces from a buddy's shop but i havent tried messing around with it yet.
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anyone try using stainless steel as a wedge material? i have some scrap pieces from a buddy's shop but i havent tried messing around with it yet.
I have used aluminum, its nice, but too light. I want my razors to be balanced, https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/201...924234fd28.jpg
Lead is your best bet for the old heavy wedge and thick spined blades, for balance.
I've thought about aluminum. Does it look good over time?
Regarding stainless steel, I have no doubt that it would work well. The question would be how hard it is to work with.
Also, as someone mentioned, lead is the perfect balancer
I got some more information on the hardness scale. In short, I made an error. Lead is 1.5 and silver is 2.5. Sterling silver would be harder.
I've gotten to the age where I have to outsmart problems rather than man handle them. I use bolt cutters on 2mm pure silver to avoid injury, which wouldn't be needed on lead.
The Mohs Scale of Hardness for Metals
Here is a list of the hardness grades for some of the metals that you are most likely to come across in your everyday life, especially when dealing with jewelry:
Lead: 1.5
Tin: 1.5
Zinc: 2.5
Gold: 2.5-3
Silver: 2.5-3
Aluminum: 2.5-3
Copper: 3
Brass: 3
Bronze: 3
Nickel: 4
Platinum: 4-4.5
Steel: 4-4.5
Iron: 4.5
Palladium: 4.75
Rhodium: 6
Titanium: 6
Hardened steel: 7-8
Tungsten: 7.5
Tungsten carbide: 8.5-9
Pete-Since you asked, yes, the aluminum stays nice and shiny, and a quick buff restores it if it ever dulls.
For you guys who prefer lead for the balance on a bigger, beefier Sheffield or similar, I get that. People use horn, wood, synthetics and many things lighter than lead, but I never thought of its function being to balance those big WB's and other choppers. Makes sense, though.