View Full Version : Restoring Vintage Safety Razors
Nico_Suave
02-07-2012, 07:25 PM
Hello All,
I have read many posts from various websites and am asking for some help on restoration of vintage safety razors. I know of the standard vinegar soak, metal polish and buffing, but do any of you have some inside secrets for getting my 1969 Gillette back to production line quality.
Thanks in advance
Nico
_MementoMori_
02-07-2012, 07:29 PM
The first bit of advice I would offer to you is to discontinue the vinegar soak effective immediately.
Instead, try heating up water in a stovetop teapot until the kettle whistles. Then, pour this water over your razor(s) until submerged. Add a healthy dose of liquid dish soap, and let everything soak until the water is cool to the touch. Repeat this as many times as necessary.
Once that's done, you should be ready to move to sanitizing with Scrubbing Bubbles and polishing with a mild metal polish. I like Flitz, Maas, and Blue Magic. I do not recommend using polish on gold plate, though. Use it only on your nickel and Rhodium plated razors.
Some handy tools to have nearby are:
an old toothbrush (for general scrubbing)
toothpicks (for digging out gunk)
cotton swabs (for polishing tight, hard to reach areas)
a brass brush (for scrubbing nickel plated razors ONLY - and make sure it's a real brass brush)
lots of rags you don't mind ruining
man00ver
02-07-2012, 07:33 PM
David speaks truth! Vinegar is acid, and is almost always needlessly harsh. It might make you cry.
Look here (http://wiki.badgerandblade.com/Safety_razor_maintenance) for some good advice.
lownslow58
02-07-2012, 07:38 PM
I just cleaned up a 64 ball end tech that was in fair shape , all I did was soak it in scrubbing bubbles for about 5 mins, scrubbed it with a soft toothbrush rinsed with some warm water , then polished it with maas metal polish and a t shirt scrap and it turned out very nice, I did use the maas a few times. Good luck I had a lot of fun and I'm kind of proud of how it turned out, alot of fun for $10.00..
Nico_Suave
02-07-2012, 07:43 PM
Thanks for the quick responses. I WILL NOT use vinegar, whew!!! I will follow your direction and give this a go. Its a 1969 Black Handle Super Adjustable and I am very excited to give vintage a go. I have a merkur and muhle right now and can't wait to see how old school stands up.
Nico
alex2363
02-07-2012, 09:16 PM
Thanks for the quick responses. I WILL NOT use vinegar, whew!!! I will follow your direction and give this a go. Its a 1969 Black Handle Super Adjustable and I am very excited to give vintage a go. I have a merkur and muhle right now and can't wait to see how old school stands up.
NicoVery wise of you to take the advise, good luck and by all means dont forget the after pics.
duokun
02-07-2012, 09:25 PM
Trust me, hot water and scrubbing bubbles does wonders. i just cleaned up an old Gillette New, and mostly i soaked it in hot water, refilling with new hot water every so often for a few hours, then scrubbing bubbles then polished it. I used Brasso, but i wouldn't recommend that if you have any plating left. Brasso is very abrasive. polishes like Maas and Flitz are much gentler and recommended for cleaning razors. i didn't care because the plating was already gone from mine.
you can check out my thread here
http://badgerandblade.com/vb/showthread.php/274681-Gillette-New-Cleanup-with-pictures?highlight=gillette+new+cleanup
be sure to read the wiki section on razor maintenance, has good info on cleaning techniques.
http://wiki.badgerandblade.com/Safety_razor_maintenance
be sure to share some before and after pictures with us!
duokun
02-07-2012, 09:27 PM
Oh yeah, an important distinction to make, boiling water is fine to POUR over a razor, that will not hurt it, but do NOT boil the razor. sitting on the bottom of a bot of boiling water WILL get the razor hot enough to damage it.
have fun cleaning up that razor!
Sunflake
02-07-2012, 09:48 PM
Oh yeah, an important distinction to make, boiling water is fine to POUR over a razor, that will not hurt it, but do NOT boil the razor. sitting on the bottom of a bot of boiling water WILL get the razor hot enough to damage it.
have fun cleaning up that razor!
+1 could melt/ warp the plastic handle
BBrad
02-08-2012, 07:11 AM
Niko - welcome to B&B, and I hope you enjoy and have good luck with your restoration projects.
David's post at the top of the thread is right on the money!! There is no better way!
duokun also speaks the truth - boiling water is ok, boiling IN water is not ok!!
shinjak
02-08-2012, 12:26 PM
+1 for the hot water method. It takes the gunk right off. Follow up with scrubbing bubbles and you will have a good looking razor. As far as getting it back to production quality, I'm not even sure that metal polish will take those fine scratches off. But then again, I haven't tried. Good luck!
PS Good looking razor duokun.
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