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Thread: Blade Centering Wiki
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11-02-2009, 10:22 PM #1
Blade Centering Wiki
After a recent issue I had with an off center blade during a restoration. I was was not only offered great advice but that same advice led me on a hunt through several forum links to find my issue had been answered through multiple threads, with multiple solutions.
first of all, thank you everyone for once again solving my problems.
second, I notice while digging through those pages that a number of members said; "I wish ??? would add their diagram to the wiki" or "Great advice, that should be added to the wiki".
I may not have made my post if the information was in the wiki. So I started a wiki page for blade centering and added it to the restoration section. I basically tried to pull the most important information from the threads I dug through to build a useful page about centering the blade. (I tried to give proper credit to everyone and specifically quoted some posts).
Considering I've not yet finished my first restore and I'm mostly regurgitating information from all over into one big pile. I could use help from the seasoned members here to refine that page into a useful article.
I'm not so good with grammar and format so a little help with the look of the page and maybe verifying the accuracy of the article would be nice.
I hope I didn't not exceed my permissions here, just trying to help out a bit...
Blade Centering - Straight Razor Place Wiki
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The Following 12 Users Say Thank You to TheBaron For This Useful Post:
AirColorado (11-04-2009), avatar1999 (11-03-2009), baldy (11-03-2009), BeBerlin (11-02-2009), Cove5440 (11-03-2009), gssixgun (11-02-2009), keenedge (11-03-2009), Maximilian (11-03-2009), sapito318 (11-04-2009), spazola (11-03-2009), stropped (11-03-2009), Tuxedo7 (11-04-2009)
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11-02-2009, 10:40 PM #2
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Thanked: 13245Looks pretty good, I added a couple of tips to it also...
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11-03-2009, 01:16 AM #3
The article looks great. I changed the first sentence in the scale adjustment section so that it matches the thoughts I was trying to get across in the original post.
Thanks again for the great article.
Charlie
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11-04-2009, 09:58 PM #4
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Thanked: 125Awesome job! Looks great.