KentuckyFisherman
Well-Known Member
I've put scales (cherry, maple, Micarta so far) on 4-5 drop-point skinners and am happy with them. But recently I finally got my buffer set up and bought muslin wheels and red/white buffing compound. First use of the buffer was on a knife with a paper Micarta handle. I got a mirror shine on the tang edges like I wanted, plus the compound polished the Micarta beautifully.
Next buffing was on a cherry handle that I had sanded to somewhere in the 400s. No sealer or finish yet. I had one wheel that I'd only used white compound on, so I used that to start buffing the tang surface between the scales. No problem really, except that when I scrubbed the compound residue off the scales, I had a few areas that looked like they had a dark grayish tint to them. I washed the cherry down with mineral spirits, but they still seemed to have some grayish tint.
My question is: What happened here? The cherry wasn't sealed, and as I buffed the steel tang with the compound, the wheel got a dark streak right in the center, which I expected. I'm thinking when I buffed the rest of the scales on that same wheel, I must have driven some of that dark compound into the pores of the wood, causing the grayish tint. Can you tell me what I should have done? Maybe I should have used my Arrow Wood oil finish until I got the pores filled, then done my buffing. But if I did that, wouldn't the discolored white compound still have possibly adhered or rubbed off onto the finish?
Sorry this post is so long, but I figure I can't get a good answer unless I do my best to describe what happened. The scales aren't ruined because the cherry is medium-dark to start with, so they'll look OK. But if I did drive dirty compound into the wood pores, it sure isn't going to have the chatoyance it might have had otherwise. Thanks in advance for your help.
Next buffing was on a cherry handle that I had sanded to somewhere in the 400s. No sealer or finish yet. I had one wheel that I'd only used white compound on, so I used that to start buffing the tang surface between the scales. No problem really, except that when I scrubbed the compound residue off the scales, I had a few areas that looked like they had a dark grayish tint to them. I washed the cherry down with mineral spirits, but they still seemed to have some grayish tint.
My question is: What happened here? The cherry wasn't sealed, and as I buffed the steel tang with the compound, the wheel got a dark streak right in the center, which I expected. I'm thinking when I buffed the rest of the scales on that same wheel, I must have driven some of that dark compound into the pores of the wood, causing the grayish tint. Can you tell me what I should have done? Maybe I should have used my Arrow Wood oil finish until I got the pores filled, then done my buffing. But if I did that, wouldn't the discolored white compound still have possibly adhered or rubbed off onto the finish?
Sorry this post is so long, but I figure I can't get a good answer unless I do my best to describe what happened. The scales aren't ruined because the cherry is medium-dark to start with, so they'll look OK. But if I did drive dirty compound into the wood pores, it sure isn't going to have the chatoyance it might have had otherwise. Thanks in advance for your help.