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Thread: Joseph Elliot Double notch restore, WIP.

  1. #1
    Captain ARAD. Voidmonster's Avatar
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    Default Joseph Elliot Double notch restore, WIP.

    Here's how it looked before I started work.


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    Here it is after a sizable chunk of hole-filling and sanding.

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    Getting it taken apart caused a bit more damage to the scales than is evident in the first picture -- the horn was just very brittle (and in full-on moron mode I disassembled it before soaking in neatsfoot oil). So the repairs you're seeing in the second picture are more extensive than is visible. Three full gaps opened in the border around the 'Philadelphia' pressing, so I had to remake several portions of border. Also, the inside of the scales was in terrible shape. They'd been near-hollowed near the toe (some of which you can see in the first image). There were lots of cracks and delaminations to deal with too.

    What's left to do.

    There are still a couple of gaps in the scales I want to fill in, plus one of the leaves in the pressing has a bug bite in it. Also, there are a few spots that need more coat & glue to even out the texture a bit.

    I'd like to get the blade sanded better, but it's proving really problematic. I might just give it a satin finish with the micromesh and call it a day.

    The wedge needs to be trimmed slightly. It blocks the blade (which is why it's assembled with microfasteners at the moment). That's because there's a tiny amount of warpage to the scales and I'm too timid the process of fixing that to try. Plus, I suspect baking the scales in a vise might damage the pressing.

    Finally, I'll make some custom washers, pin it, hone it and shave.
    -Zak Jarvis. Writer. Artist. Bon vivant.

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    Captain ARAD. Voidmonster's Avatar
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    Default One answer among many: the infamous 'why a barber's notch'?

    I've been continuing to dink around with getting the blade to close without hitting the wedge. I really didn't want to have to cut it down.

    So I took out the bearing washers I'd added (it didn't originally have any). That makes it fit.

    However there's something very interesting going on here. The pivot hole is designed as an oval and the tang tapers just a bit. The tolerance of distance between the blade tip and the wedge is such that you need to push the blade back slightly to get it to miss the wedge, and then once closed, it locks into place. The hollow toe (barber's notch) actually makes this easy and I could almost swear it was designed this way on purpose. The blade won't open without a bit of force and you have to use the notch to close it. Almost as though the notch were intended as a locking feature.

    This might well change once I pin it for real, but for the moment I consider this a distinct 'hmmmm!' feature.

    Then again, maybe it's just an artifact of the way I've fixed up the scales.
    -Zak Jarvis. Writer. Artist. Bon vivant.

  3. #3
    Member twogun's Avatar
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    That will definitely be sweet when your done. I commend you on restoring the scales, thats alot of work and they look pretty good to me in the pictures. I can't wait to see the finished razor.

    I just finished restoring an old Joseph Rodgers Full Wedge Lip lopper and I did the blade in a satin finish and the spine and tang fully polished. The satin finish really made the blade pop. So the idea of the satin finish would probably really make that razor really stand out. Please keep us updated and keep up the good work.

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    Quote Originally Posted by twogun View Post
    That will definitely be sweet when your done. I commend you on restoring the scales, thats alot of work and they look pretty good to me in the pictures. I can't wait to see the finished razor.

    I just finished restoring an old Joseph Rodgers Full Wedge Lip lopper and I did the blade in a satin finish and the spine and tang fully polished. The satin finish really made the blade pop. So the idea of the satin finish would probably really make that razor really stand out. Please keep us updated and keep up the good work.
    Thanks! I wish I'd gotten better 'before' pictures, because it's hard to see some of the work I did (as in I know I did more fill-ins than I can currently find while looking at it up close with good light). I played around with knocking the finish down to satin using micromesh, but the blade isn't really having any of it. I might need to send it to someone that's got a buffer for proper cleaning. At some point before I got this razor, someone did a really lousy job cleaning it with a Dremel (or like tool). It's got telltale wandering patterns of ground-out metal as well as deep pitting. I tried getting it out with hand-sanding. My patience ran out.

    However, I'm also thinking of fixing up this razor to the same level:

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    (While that blade does have a lot of toe wear, the taper is actually an intentional design feature)

    I'd make a nice presentation box to put them in when I was done fixing the razors. They're both Joseph Elliot blades and I'd guess they were made within a few years of each other. I think they'd make a really neat pair.
    -Zak Jarvis. Writer. Artist. Bon vivant.

  5. #5
    Captain ARAD. Voidmonster's Avatar
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    Default The last mile is always the hardest.

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    A close up of the detail work I've done restoring these scales.

    (the difference in color is due to different cameras and different times of day -- my main light source is the window of my office)

    I'm filling gaps using horn shavings (from a piece of donor horn) and CA glue. From the initial attempts I've modified slightly and now compressing the horn shavings down after I apply the CA glue, repeating until the gap is filled.

    Getting the gap in that one leaf below the flower filled without putting a bunch of filler-material in the outlying design was... interesting.

    I'm not entirely happy about the fine details I lost in getting a good polish, but having dug a piece of pre-restoration photo reference out of my phone's camera means I can (and might) go back in with a dental pick and add the detail back. Getting the leaf shape wasn't horrible. It's doing the CA coat & polish shuffle that's being a larger pain. That whole process of: coat! sand! polish! (find spot where the polish has gone through the coat) re-coat! sand! polish! (start swearing) re-coat! sand.... etc.
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    -Zak Jarvis. Writer. Artist. Bon vivant.

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    Now I just need to hone it.

    I made the washers with some wide #00 brass and my doming block. In a last ditch effort to make the blade look less cruddy I taped the spine and stabilizer and then hit the blade with what remains of my last 320 grit sanding-puff for the Dremel. It doesn't have much virtue left in it, but it did give me small, reasonably consistent scratches that align with what would've been the original grind-marks if they had survived the surface-destroying apocalypse.

    Tomorrow I'll get better pictures. The full porno-spread, in fact.
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    -Zak Jarvis. Writer. Artist. Bon vivant.

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    Member jay88's Avatar
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    wow that looks awesome i have got to find me one of those

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    Senior Member Wintchase's Avatar
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    That is a great idea on how to fill those scales with donor horn dust! I am going to try that. Too. I have a bunch of horn scales with nibbles out of them.

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    I'm not quite ready to put this in the Restorations gallery. I'd like to get opinions on it.

    First up, the razor-porn spread:

    BEFORE

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    After

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    And now I'd like opinions.

    Despite executing the domed washers about %99.8 perfectly, I'm not loving the way they look on this razor. I think I should've gone with traditional flat washers. Plus, having done the pins after dark, I didn't notice the spot where my CA coat delaminated around the pivot pin.

    Second, the scales look so good I want the blade to look better.

    Should I repin and go back to the hand-sand mines until the blade is closer to perfect?
    Last edited by Voidmonster; 03-08-2012 at 07:27 PM.
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    -Zak Jarvis. Writer. Artist. Bon vivant.

  10. #10
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    Looks great. Love that blade The pins are personal preferance I guess but you did a really nice job on them. As for the blade, it looks like some deep pitting on it and you'd have to remove alot of steel to get that looking "perfect". If it were me, I'd leave it as is with a bit of character, but thats just my opinion

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