#1

Member
Central Maine
(This post was last modified: 08-26-2016, 09:49 PM by ShadowsDad.)
This is my journey into the intriguing Rolls Razor.

After promising to post this data I looked at it and realized that the best way was just to post my notes and such and let the user sift through it. At least some of it chronicles my learning curve with it. But I also had help, one Marcus Clarke of the UK and member of the now gone The Other Safety Too forum (TOST) where we did nothing but SE razors.

You'll also find in the coming link the reason I used the method I selected. I didn't want to get involved in stones and such but I knew that I wanted to know how to take a 70 year old blade and make it shave worthy without outside help. The Scary Sharp method allows me to do that, and you can too without any special knowledge, just finesse and light moves. If you can shave with a blade you can bring an old blade back to shave worthiness and keep it there. Think a stockpile of disposable blades will give a lot of shaves? Just one Rolls blade will give a few lifetimes of shaves, and they are really fantastic shaves once you learn the simple techniques. But frankly, they are time consuming and disposable blades have the edge there with their convenience.

Read over the information in the link. It should all be there as far as what you need to get going in the Scary Sharp system and to get a shave edge on the Rolls blade. I wrote it so that I could pick it up years later and wouldn't have questions. Even what didn't work so well is there, so skip over that and just stick to what worked. But understand that I didn't just do this overnight. But you can if you learn from my mistakes. Pay attention to the dates at the left of the journal.

OK, the link. Sorry, but the easiest way to do this is to just give access to everything. It may disappear at some point (I might need the space), so I would download to your computer what you want from it. Take it all if you wish. I only ask that the copyright be kept with the files that I wrote. I believe I have kept the credits with the other files that I didn't write; please keep them intact also for those authors.

If anyone has problems reading the WordPerfect files let me know and I'll convert them to .txt, but they will lose the formatting. Any other questions? Get back to me here, but please read the files first. I think your questions will be answered.

Good luck gents, the Rolls can be a great shave and the ability to actually learn how to produce a shave worthy edge, I think, is worth the journey.

>>>>>>>>>Click here<<<<<<<<<<

Bummer! I had to remove a 'net webpage that helped to explain the Scary Sharp method because it wasn't all there.

jmudrick, hrfdez, wyze0ne and 1 others like this post
Brian. Lover of SE razors.
#2
Good man.

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#3
(This post was last modified: 08-27-2016, 05:17 AM by jmudrick.)
I've mirrored the wpd files and converted doc versions here (leaving them unedited, retaining copyright. Hope that's ok:

https://drive.google.com/folderview?id=0...npDVkpVYkk

Thanks again. I have some lapping film in the mail.

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wyze0ne and Asafiev like this post
#4

Member
Detroit
Thanks for that jmudrick. I was having trouble viewing these on my Android phone. Now I can see them. It's quite the exhaustive resource!
- Jeff
#5
Thank you so much for this ShadowsDad. , I have just bought 2 Rolls Razors , both Viscount model's and this will be invaluable to me as a resource
#6
Since lapping film is available at 1200 grit equivalent an up, is their any advantage (other than cost) to using the abrasive paper for the 1200-5000 grit range?

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#7

Member
Central Maine
(08-27-2016, 09:53 PM)jmudrick Wrote: Since lapping film is available at 1200 grit equivalent an up, is their any advantage (other than cost) to using the abrasive paper for the 1200-5000 grit range?

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I'm not sure that I understand.

The papers you're referring to go up to 5u and the lapping films go from 3u to .3u. So yes the advantage is that they are much finer and better work to produce the edge you seek once you get to that point in the process.

BTW, Thanks for doing that with the .docs. As long as you kept the copyrights what you did was fine.

TGS, I'm just disappointed that TOST is down. We had a thread there that was far more thorough. If it ever comes back I'll be sure to post the link.
Brian. Lover of SE razors.
#8

Vintage Razor Fan
Southwestern NY
Thank you so much, ShadowsDad for sharing this valuable information!

I have two Rolls razor sets(why would I ever have one of anything?) and have been wondering how to make sure I'm starting with a decent edge and this cures that problem. This is greatly appreciated.
-Rob
#9
(This post was last modified: 08-29-2016, 01:30 AM by jmudrick.)
(08-28-2016, 08:41 AM)ShadowsDad Wrote:
(08-27-2016, 09:53 PM)jmudrick Wrote: Since lapping film is available at 1200 grit equivalent an up, is their any advantage (other than cost) to using the abrasive paper for the 1200-5000 grit range?

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I'm not sure that I understand.

The papers you're referring to go up to 5u and the lapping films go from 3u to .3u.

Actually the 3M film is available in 5, 9 and 12 micron sheets as well, equivalent to 2500, 1800 and 1200 grit. I could only find the 5 with the adhesive backing but ordered the others here.

http://www.ebay.com/itm/222227103520
[IMG

]http://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/20160829/2fb0970e655b678b943a90e45b442144.jpg[/IMG]



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#10

Member
Central Maine
One doesn't need to duplicate the same grit as the "sandpaper" grits. Hence the lapping film only being listed in the finer grits. It picks up where the sandpaper stops. Or that's what I came up with back when I did that experimenting.
Brian. Lover of SE razors.


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