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  1. #1
    The Razor Whisperer Philadelph's Avatar
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    I love those spines!

  2. #2
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    That looks like the dreaded amber celluloid. If it is the rust will be back. The only solution I found was to rescale them.

  3. #3
    Senior Member crichton's Avatar
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    Holy crap those are nice blades.....they are gonna be real lookers once you're all through Chris!

  4. #4
    JGS
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    Senior Member JGS's Avatar
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    Wow!...I know believe it is possible to restore blades that would never have seemed possible.

    Great work.

  5. #5
    < Banned User >
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    They are tortoise. Passed the pin test. Though one has a crack and since i intend to use them I might buy some tortoise scales and carefully replace these to preserve them.

    So you guys want a great tip. As I said before I come from polishing metal. So as you guys have experienced, when you have that sort of rust and you take a dremel to it and polish away with maas it turns black and makes the blade hard to clean. Then when it comes off you have pits. This is because the oxides are harder than the steel and when being removed from small pits abrade the surface around it causing the pits to enlarge.

    Instead, take an old razor that is not worth restoring and use it to shave off the red and shallow black rust from the blade as if you were shaving your face. It will come right off. You will also have less pits in the blade. Be careful though because the edge can cut into the blade and ruin it if you press too hard or arent careful around the edges of the blade. Now you can start fine sanding or go to cutting rouges on a polishing wheel then polishing or both.


    BTW did you notice that it is now a spike. There was a 1 mm crack at the end of the blade. So I reshaped both into spikes. Good thing too because I don't really like rounds.

  6. #6
    Junior Honemeister Mike_ratliff's Avatar
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    Very impressive, I'd have given both of those up as a lost cause.

  7. #7
    < Banned User >
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    Now to level the surface so it can be mirror

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