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I need some help with these scales !
I am doing my first restore on an http://straightrazorpalace.com/works...warranted.html and the blade is coming along nicely so far. I have not touched the scales yet and I am not even sure what they are made of. At first I thought bone but the more I read the less sure I am about it. So if anyone can say for sure what they are and give me a path to start on, I would be most grateful. They are full of cracks in all directions and warped every which-a-way but I would love to save them.
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Let's see if they can be flattened first .
So. I started to play with them and the first thing I did was soak them in water for 6 hours. I took one out and put it between a rag and set it in the vice just to see what happens. It was very encouraging to see it dried and held a somewhat straighter shape. I tossed them back in the water and started gathering up some clamps and wood. I dug up an old pad for an English saddle I had and cut some pieces to make a wood/scale/foam sandwich.
This side was a lot thicker than the other half. These scales looked to me like they were one piece when they were first made.
I left the part hanging out the end because it's part of the wedge. I didn't want it to affect the flatness of the scale as it was pressed so I simply left it hanging out. Then I clamped it down as tight as I could with c- clamps. I did even it out on the end so it did not put too much pressure on the piece extending out.
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The second half took some thinking. A crack at the hinge pin and the wedge end was thicker on this side than the other. Plus the wedge part was not at all even as it looked to me like it cracked or was pulled apart at one time. I wanted to try to force the crack closed and press it flat at the same time so I notched out a piece of the wood for it to hang in so I could use a nails to hold it in place. After I got the nails in I trimmed them down to the height of the scale with cutters.
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The crack closed up pretty nice and I hope it stays that way. I can think of 2 mistakes I may have made. 1. I could have put some paper towels in the sandwich to help the scales dry out faster/better. 2. The wedge end of the second scale may bend down into the notch as I was not careful with the depth of it. So I have to go fix these things and in a couple of days I'll come back with what happened. So far I am feeling this may work out after all !