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The Newbies Arena Are you new to knife making? Here is all the help you will need.

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  #1  
Old 09-13-2017, 06:15 AM
Rasmus Kristens Rasmus Kristens is offline
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Electrical tape etch in blade?!

Hi all

I'm was working on one of my knifes and wanted to protect the finished blade while finishing up the handle.
I coated it in a generousamount of WD40 and wrap it in black electrical tape.

When i finshed my handle and removed the tape, it revealed som deep black areas on the blade.

It's not possible to polish the areas, and I can feel an actual depress in the steel.. It seems almost etched in to the blade.

I can uploade a picture later today.

Have anyone ever had this problem?

Rasmus
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  #2  
Old 09-13-2017, 07:59 AM
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Ed Caffrey Ed Caffrey is offline
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It's not uncommon. Sometimes it's caused by a corrosive adhesive on cheaper grade of electrical tape. Some tape adhesives react corrosively with WD-40.

In my early years of knifemaking I had a lot of this type of thing happen. Personally I never cover a blade anymore..... I've found it's best to just be cautious and take care not to damage a finished blade, versus dealing with the problems caused by attempting to protect a blade.


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Old 09-13-2017, 09:15 AM
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Ray Rogers Ray Rogers is offline
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Apparently Ed has heard of using electrical tape for this purpose before but that's a new one for me. When the subject of taping a blade comes up 3M blue masking tape seems to be what most people use, it certainly is my choice. I've never had a problem with it. I'd go so far as to say that, for me at least, it would be 3M blue or nothing at all ....


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Old 09-13-2017, 12:13 PM
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MVPeterson MVPeterson is offline
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I wrap blade with Saran Wrap first, then tape.
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Old 09-13-2017, 12:34 PM
jimmontg jimmontg is offline
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I wrap like Mark does with plastic wrap, it also makes it easier to remove. It is the method I also use when forming veg tanned leather into a sheath for hi-carbon steels so they don't rust.
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Old 09-13-2017, 01:36 PM
dtec1 dtec1 is offline
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I use the same as ray blue painter tape
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Old 09-13-2017, 02:27 PM
Rasmus Kristens Rasmus Kristens is offline
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Well i will do that from now on. To bad i learned the hard way, but thats life for you ;-)
Thanks for the info.
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Old 09-13-2017, 04:53 PM
epicfail48 epicfail48 is offline
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Never much liked using electrical or duct tape on metals. Both types always seem to leave a pretty nasty residue or discoloration on the blade, never had it etch though. I like masking tape. Generous coating of oil on the blade, good wrap of masking tape. Protects it from scratches when putting the handles on and come off clean
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Old 09-14-2017, 09:15 AM
dtec1 dtec1 is offline
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Same thing here a heavy tape like duct tape electrical tape has a lot of adheasive on it....that you would need to clean off with something like acetone. with masking tape there is no where near as much adheasive most of the time it comes off clean but sometimes if you leave it on for a while or you really press it on the the blade it might leave a LITTLE adhesive a lil acetone on a paper towel or micro fiber cloth it wipes right of in one or 2 swipes something like duct tape you need to do more scrubbing to get it off OR just put the blade in a bucket of acetone...a minute or 2 it should wipe off very easily but if you let it soak for a while you wont even need to wipe it off the acetone will dissolve the adheasive after a while
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adhesive, blade, carbon, clean, common, electrical, etch, etched, handle, handles, knife, knifemaking, leather, plastic, polish, press, problem, question, sheath, steel, tanned leather, tap, what kind, wrap


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