The online community of knife collectors, A Knife Family Forged in Steel
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I was reviewing old iKC discussions and, as an amateur knife collector, modifier, repairer and restorer, this one was particularly interesting to me:
"I just polished the blades on an old, cheap Boker knife. I have a polishing wheel that I've used for years to polish brass and copper, so I'm experienced at using the wheel. But, being new to knife collecting, I'm wondering if I'd be making a mistake by polishing blades of better knives. It doesn't remove pits, but it removes all the spots and makes the blades shine."
I have bought a few old knives, especially military ones, that were pitted and thickly coated with rust. It doesn't make sense to me to put a knife in this condition in my collection, so I have used naval jelly and coarse steel wool to remove the rust and used very fine steel wool to remove the remaining tarnish. On antique and collectible quality pocket knives that are pitted and really rusty, I use the same process, and add a final step of polishing the blades and bolsters. I agree that knives that are merely tarnished or have a fine patina may not need any polishing, but in my humble opinion, they are in a completely different category. I would like to know whether other collectors feel the same was as I do about this.
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