I have never glued the wedge and have not seen a wedge glued in any of the razors that I removed the scales or had broken scales.
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I have never glued the wedge and have not seen a wedge glued in any of the razors that I removed the scales or had broken scales.
I left this thread for quite awhile so every one could answer...
Here are some things I learned by taking apart a ton of razors before I EVER started making my own scales...
First there is no RIGHT way so the choice is yours...
I have never seen a completely glued wedge in vintage razors, I have seen glued scales that had no wedge... I have even seen plastic scales (not Celluloid) that had a spacer formed on one side of the scales...
They normally only glued one side on the wedge, if there was any glue at all..
Most Vintage razors had neither side glued...
WHY???
Only a guess, but I think it was to allow for flex and adjustment, seems to work that way...
Again the choice is yours, but I never glue wedges....Keep this tidbit of info in the back of yer mind "Not all tangs/razors are made straight" you might need that adjustment
Not to be contrarian but, just for a differing perspective, I do indeed glue both sides of the wedges onto the scales I make. It may be over kill, and can be a real PIA when trying to clamp the scaled for the glue to set, but that's how I do it. If the wedge is fairly steep, I will glue the wedge and pin it at the same time, otherwise my spring clamps pop off. Of course you really need three hands to get it all together without epoxying everything in the room. :eek:
However, if I'm just repining a razor and using all the original parts, I put it back together the way I found it.
I haven't got to the glue stage, but I'm going to glue the wedge in my first attempt at restoration. i've clamped it together with a closepin, held the blade in and all looks well so far.
One other thing. The wedge in the pic is much wider than even the razors spine causing the blade to fall inside the scales. Really needs to be much thinner.
I do hope you ahve the small bolts for mocking everything up before final assembly...
I certainly am no resto expert. Getting the wedge and pinning to all orchestrate so the blade sits centered is a task that takes a ton of practice.