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6 Attachment(s)
Blade Experiment
I had sent this Robert Klaas blade out to be honed but rust and pitting it made it impossible for the honemiester to get a good bevel without micro chipping. So it made an excellent test bed. I decided to see if I could frost the finish. So I set the sandblaster up at work and it worked like a charm. This did not remove pitting but it sure made it obvious. So now I'm going to sand out the pitting and see if I can reprofile the blade and make it shave once again.
Before:
Attachment 91191Attachment 91192
After:
Attachment 91193Attachment 91194Attachment 91195Attachment 91196
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2 Attachment(s)
Update:
I sanded from 80 to 320 grit. I managed to get all the pits out. I then bread knifed the frown out of the blade. My goal here is to frost just the grind and have the rest a mirror finish. So we shall see how this goes. Oh yeah! Here are the pics of the blade at 320 grit
Attachment 91226Attachment 91227
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I like the idea. You will have to make another with a mirror grind and everything else frosted.
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Lol maybe so. Now you have me wondering which way would look better????
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IMO I would frost the tang and make the blade a mirror finish.
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Update: well here is the blade before final buff. I am really leaning towards frosting just the grind and leaving the shank and spine mirror finish. What do you guys think?
http://img.tapatalk.com/47ea3b27-b7c8-55ff.jpg
http://img.tapatalk.com/47ea3b27-b7d4-761f.jpg
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3 Attachment(s)
* UPDATE*
The blade was finish sanded and buffed. I took a good look at it and decided not to frost any part of it. So I made up a set of scales with a horn spacer and finished them in a CA finish. Only problem is I won't use horn again as a spacer as its variable coloring makes the wedge look like its cracked in places. But it's not! So I left it rather than un pin the whole damn thing. Well anyhow here are the pics
Attachment 91470Attachment 91471Attachment 91472