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Vergez Blanchard knives - brand new and RUSTY


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Posted

Polish off the rust with 0000 steel wool and apply paste wax. Good as new :P and will stay that way with re-waxing now and then.

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1 hour ago, SidS said:

I received these less than 24 hours ago

Totally irrelevant. It probably occurred shortly after production. As many above have stated, it is a non-issue. You can either spend less than 5 minutes on them and start using them, or you can wait for however long it takes for one of the two companies to send you replacements that may have the same issue.

Hoka Hey! Today, tomorrow, next week, what does it matter?

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Posted (edited)
6 hours ago, tsunkasapa said:

Totally irrelevant. It probably occurred shortly after production.

I was responding to one of the many helpful suggestions in here.

Quote

As many above have stated, it is a non-issue. You can either spend less than 5 minutes on them and start using them, or you can wait for however long it takes for one of the two companies to send you replacements that may have the same issue.

That seems to be the consensus and will most likely do that - and talk to the two companies in question.

Edited by SidS
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Posted
22 hours ago, battlemunky said:

High carbon steel is going to rust. It sucks that wasn't explained at the time of purchase but even if you clean it off and keep after it there is always maintenance with carbon steel. Having said that, it should affect the tool much at all and from your pics it is just surface rust and no pitting or anything crazy near the sharp bits so you should be good.

exact,good answer.

nothing very nasty, a little shot of steel wool a shot of polish and it's good.

time does not respect what is done without it

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Posted

My choice has always been Johnson's paste wax. You might still be able to find a can on a store shelf. It is no longer produced. There are some other waxes still available however. Just look for a carnauba wax. Pledge will do the same thing but it has to be refreshed more frequently. Amazon has a variety and if I needed any I would go with Minwax, Trewax, or Simonize. Stay away from those that contain oils as they aren't as durable.

I have used paste wax as a rust preventive for years. I use it on my table saw to reduce friction and on any bare metal tools I have. It works better than any oil wipe, doesn't get on your hands or work, and is odorless after it dries.

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Posted

Also if you have access to some gun cold bluing it'll work as well. You could also use vinegar to force a patina that should inhibit further corrosion too.

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Cold or hot salt bluing will not prevent rust and patina is just controlled rust. Even here in the land of far apart raindrops it's a problem and why I started using paste wax on firearms back in the late '60's. I haven't any rust since.

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Posted

I blued my Blanchard wing dividers and live in Alabama where it is decently humid and haven't had rust since I did it, not even on places where my hands touch so I figured it was good as a surface protectant from minor rust. Same with my carbon knives, zero rust anymore. *Shrug*

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