Yup, that's it. I partially open the blade and just manually stayed away from the liners, a finer stone would be nice.Ivoryman wrote: ↑Thu Jul 08, 2021 12:48 am Thanks for the tips. That looks like a pretty coarse stone isn't it? I thought you would use a much finer stone, but guess not. And when you say "lift the spring" do you mean you open the blade partially to raise it up? If so, how can I do that on a spring where the pitting is right above or on top of the spring pin? That's where my corrosion is, right above the spring pin so even when blade is 1/3 or 2/3 open, it doesn't really raise the spring up much? How do I grind that spring down without hitting the liner and bone? Maybe I just need to tape off the bone and liner? Any tips you have would be helpful and gratefully welcome as I still don't fully understand everything you do to keep the stone off liner and scale. Thanks for the response and all info you have given though. Really am impressed with your restoration. Amazing difference. Thanks again for the tutorial. Love tips and info like this.
I don't have many different stones for the dremel and that one just happened to be the right width, that's the only reason I used it. I set the dremel to 3, a low to medium rotation speed and I kept the face of the stone level with the spring as I ever so lightly made short strokes towards me only, feathering the new layer into the undamaged areas. I used blue painter's tape to protect the covers and it worked good. I just think wrist control is where it's at. If you got that, you're good.
