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Unusual Paint Scraper

Paul Aslanides

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Joined
Nov 4, 2022
Messages
39
Found this scraper recently, it has no stampings or markings. Opens to three positions with a locking catch. It takes the standard GEM safety razor blade. The clamp plate has long been installed upside down, as evidenced by the rust. The threads in both the thumbscrew and the body are partly worn, and the thumbscrew is a little short, hence it can no longer be installed correctly. I'm not sure just how to fix that, might have to find a longer screw and put a loose nut behind. Anyone recognise the make of this item ? I'm wondering where it was made. Thanks. Scraper 1.jpgScraper 2.jpgScraper 3.jpgScraper 4.jpg
 
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darkzero

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Oct 20, 2011
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Like 25-30+ years ago I used to see that style all over the place. Never thought anything special of them & IMO they weren't all that great to use. The ones I've seen were probably cheap copies but still.

"standard GEM safety razor blade". So is GEM the inventor of what I know as No. 9 razor blades? I've never seen GEM branded blades for sale anywhere locally here until I got 3 boxes of GEM blades. Not that I really care about the brand name, I only bought them cause of the dispenser & one of them being stainless blades.
 

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dscheidt

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Apr 26, 2017
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If someone wants to look it up, I recall 'King' Gillette may have had something to do with a twin-blade 'safety' razor
No quotes required, it was the guy's name. his razor, and the copies of it, use a twin edge razor, which has the advantage of providing two edges to get dull before it needs replacing. Gem's safety razor uses the single edge blades we all use in scrapers and the like in a shaving handle. (I don't know if they invented the blade or not). They are thicker, stay sharp longer, and are much safer to handle, and make better scrapers.
 
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Paul Aslanides

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Nov 4, 2022
Messages
39
Thanks, all. I mentioned GEM because those safety blades came in a little packet, less than one square inch, back in the 50's, 60's. The little packet, you know the sort - you put it away somewhere safe but you could never find it when you wanted it, until you were looking for something else. I've got one somewhere....but I haven't seen it for years. Meanwhile, Mr. Stanley now provides them, in a little dispenser pack which I could find, and Lo ! it fits nicely and the clamping plate can go on the right way, and the little thumbscrew tightens down just right. Turns out the old blade (made in Taiwan) was much thicker than the proper ones.
In this photo there's the scraper made of pressed metal, and made in the USA. It sits on a ledge in the garage, for nearly forty years, and as mentioned above, was used once a year to scrape the car registration sticker off the windscreen. One year I couldn't find it, and had to buy a cheap copy from our cheap supply store. It was made...somewhere else over there...and was so flimsy I turfed it straight after that single use.
The other scraper is a you-beaut, fold-up, with safety catch, from Kingchrome.
Both of them have the problem that the blade can slip out to one side if you're not careful.
I have tried the standard Gillette double-sided razor blade in the new-old scraper, but it doesn't fit, as it is much wider, and so it won't fit between those two locating tabs. Funny, that. I would have thought that all razor blades were of the same dimensions, but that's because the cutouts on the sides look alike. Cheers.
Scraper 5.jpg
Scraper 4.jpg
 
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Paul Aslanides

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Nov 4, 2022
Messages
39
caddyman Thank you. Now I know where it was made. Mine has no letter stamping on it at all, not anywhere. Wonder if K - D is still in business. Cheers.

Looking up K-D, now part of GearWrench brand. K-D has a 95 year history. Believed to be the first to make laminated ratcheting box wrenches in multiple sizes.
 
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