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Thread: Should I leave good enough alone on my Kingcutter?

  1. #11
    Senior Member blabbermouth
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    See if it will hold an edge, before you invest a bunch of time, and find out it won’t.

    Hone it.
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  2. #12
    Senior Member blabbermouth
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    So, just looking at the gold wash will thin the gold and eventually make it disappear.

    Almost true. Metal polish, let alone steel wool or a buffing wheel will strip it off in a blink. Patina is rust, not active rust but rust none the less. If you get it on your strop, it is abrasive and can/will affect you edge.

    You want to remove as much “patina” as possible. Decide if you want to try to save the Gold Wash, I do not know any way to brighten it without removing some of it.

    If you remove it, 000 steel wool and WD40 will remove most of it, 600 -1000 grit steel wool will remove all the patina and gold and ready for polishing. or a buffing wheel with 600 grit will do it all in minutes.

    If you want to try and save the wash, you will have to cover it with tape, experiment with masking or scotch tape, I would first try good low tac, blue masking tape, take a small piece on a corner and put on the gold lightly, carefully pull it off and see if the gold comes with it.

    If not cover the wash and with a razor cut out the shape of the wash, then you can use steel wool and polish to get as close as possible and preserve the wash. Do not leave the tape on any longer than necessary. And remove it if you have to leave the project for an extended time, (overnight). A hair dryer heat will loosen the glue for better removal, but it is old and thin so do not hold out great hope with this process, go slow.

    Pick up an inexpensive electric eraser and extra erasers. You can get them of a couple dollars, battery operated. With a touch of a good metal polish, you can get up right to the edge of the tape and right to the line with the tape removed to touch up. Steel wool and wet and dry sand paper will get the rest, used with wine corks large erasers, chopstick, wooden coffee stir stick and pencil erasers over bits of sand paper will get it all eventually.

    It is a lot of work, so before you start all this madness, hone the razor and make sure the razor will take an edge. If not, don’t waste your time.

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  4. #13
    Senior Member Doc226's Avatar
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    Use nail polish to cover the gold wash, then your favorite metal polish.

    Use acetone to remove the nail polish and enjoy.

    As others have said though, make sure you can get a clean bevel before investing too much time
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  6. #14
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    Quote Originally Posted by Doc226 View Post
    Use nail polish to cover the gold wash, then your favorite metal polish.

    Use acetone to remove the nail polish and enjoy.

    As others have said though, make sure you can get a clean bevel before investing too much time
    That is a really interesting idea. I assumed that the acetone would actually pull the goldwash off too.

    I took the above advice over the weekend and took it to the hones. I started with some light breadknifing to take out that slight frown and then went to work on setting a bevel. I had to even the edge out a bit using some selective pressure on one side of the toe. After breadknifing it, getting a bevel was a lot of work and it took me longer than I thought it would, but I stuck to it and managed to get the bevel set.

    Now I'm working on sanding out the pitting. I tried packing tape first to cover the goldwash but it is simply too thing. Regular scotch tape, though, did a good job. It's tedious to cut around all the wash and I'm sure to take it off every time, so I'm just taking my time and when I find myself with a free hour I'll go through and carefully sand using 120 grit. I don't have all the pitting out yet. The plan going forward is simply to not rush anything and enjoy the experience, rather than getting over focused on the result and finishing.

    Since the scales are already off I might also make a custom set on, but that's a ways away still and I'll cross that bridge when I get there.
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  7. #15
    Heat it and beat it Bruno's Avatar
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    In the 12 years I've been doing this, I have learned that whenever you ask yourself: "Should I leave well enough alone, or am I going to tweak it just a little bit more?"
    The right answer almost turns out to be: "I really should have left it alone"
    Til shade is gone, til water is gone, Into the shadow with teeth bared, screaming defiance with the last breath.
    To spit in Sightblinder’s eye on the Last Day

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    https://picreator.co.uk/vulpex-liquid-soap/

    on a German forum this is discussed to clean up etchings. But it's expensive!

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  10. #17
    Senior Member Doc226's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Bruno View Post
    In the 12 years I've been doing this, I have learned that whenever you ask yourself: "Should I leave well enough alone, or am I going to tweak it just a little bit more?"
    The right answer almost turns out to be: "I really should have left it alone"
    One of my favorite sayings is "the enemy of good is perfect"
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  11. #18
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    Quote Originally Posted by Bruno View Post
    In the 12 years I've been doing this, I have learned that whenever you ask yourself: "Should I leave well enough alone, or am I going to tweak it just a little bit more?"
    The right answer almost turns out to be: "I really should have left it alone"
    Quote Originally Posted by Doc226 View Post
    One of my favorite sayings is "the enemy of good is perfect"
    Don't I know it! I've certainly done my fair share of pushing things too far. Every time I do, though, I learn something new and, since this is a hobby not a profession for me, that's just fine. Maybe the biggest lesson I've learned in the last few years is simply slow and steady, followed closely by no cool tricks or tools beat good old fashioned elbow grease.
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  12. #19
    Razor Vulture sharptonn's Avatar
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    No guts...No glory.
    YMMV
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