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Thread: Why you shouldn't buy a Gold Dollar.....yet.

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    Senior Member aa1192's Avatar
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    Default Why you shouldn't buy a Gold Dollar.....yet.

    Oh the allure of a Gold Dollar razor to the new straight shaver. You are telling me I can get a razor that will shave for under ten dollars shipped?!?!?!?! What is wrong with all these suckers paying 100 bucks? How is Dovo still in business? A Gold Dollar can be made shave ready and be a pretty darn good shaver; that is a fact! What you don't see is the amount of effort it can take to get from point A to shave ready.

    Gold Dollar in my experience has been quite the crap shoot razor to razor. My first 66 had a stablizer that was obscene; I mean like a good bit of Dremel grinding to fix the issue. That is not even the worst... Today I got another 66 and it is a trainwreck, a fixable trainwreck, but it's gonna be a lot of work before it even touches the hones.

    The new 66's edge has heel spur, a toe spur (didn't even know this existed til today), and a couple frowns. The blade hits the scales when you close it, the round point is way off kilter, and as always the stabilizer is a mess. That means I have to: breadknife the blade, change out the scales (I could probably straighten the blade, but the scales look terrible and crack easily), possibly straighten out the point for looks, grind out the stablizer, and finally reset a factory bevel from my breadknife. This is a decent amount of time and work with some experience, so imagine it being your first go. This does not even include running it through a honing regiment and most honers aren't gonna do that initial work for ya.

    Doing this work can be fun and really rewarding, but not as your first razor. Your first Gold Dollar should be your first restore/project razor if anything. You learn a ton and it is okay to screw it up. Plus you should see some of the mods other people do....AWESOME. A fixed GD is a great way to practice honing strokes as well and I often use my GDs as new hone testers. Learning to shave with a straight is pretty darn hard at first so save yourself the 10 bucks and many headaches til later on when it will be fun and valuable. Get a good vintage razor off the classifieds or buy new, but get something that out of the box is gonna be a great shaver without any work. I am not saying don't buy a GD; I am saying wait and go into it with clear expectations. That GD is gonna need work, but that's the best part about them. They are only as good as you can make them.
    Razor rich, but money poor. I should have diversified into Eschers!

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    That actually makes a lot of sense. I admit, I was one of the people browsing all of those cheap GD on amazon and eBay when I was first getting into the sport. Thankfully, I read up on them across multiple shaving forums and avoided that train wreck... not that my first blade didn't fall into that category on its own anyways. This could be fun later down the line when I can afford to get some good hones and dremmel bits. Something along the lines of this post should be posted somewhere as a primary search for Gold Dollar on the site to let the newbies know what to expect should they try to buy the cheap-o blade.

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    A 6/8 Gold Dollar 208 shave ready razor was my 1st regular straight shave after using a Feather AC SS razor for 6 months. I bought my GD from a local honemeister who had already made corrections and honed it to shave ready. It's still in my rotation. Just yesterday, I had a "Poor Boy Shave" using my least expensive razor, brush and soap (Razor: GD 208-Brush: Semogue 1470-Soap: Palmolive). I got a great BBS shave from these inexpensive but quality products. The GD shaved as close as I get from my Dovo Bismarck, Boker 6/8 Silver Steel EH or Dubl Duck Goldedge. The GD's fit & finish is crude but the blade steel must be high quality because it holds a good edge

    My GD 208 is interesting because it shaves as good as any of my Dovo, Boker or vintage razors that I now have. The GD has a thick heavy spine but is ground to a very thin blade near the cutting edge so that the blade tip actually "pings" when plucked with a fingernail much like my extra hollow "singing" razors.

    The GD is still in my rotation because it gives a close shave, feels heavy in the hand and reminds me you can get a good shave with inexpensive but quality materials. The GD ain't pretty but "It'll get'r done".

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    Truth is weirder than any fiction.. Grazor's Avatar
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    Going by the title, I thought you were gonna say they have a new manager, and all these issues had been ironed out and they were dropping the price by $1. The one and only I ever bought, I must have got lucky, not perfect, but not bad either, the scales were rubbish, but took an ok edge. I promptly destroyed it with a dremel trying to customise it.
    Into this house we're born, into this world we're thrown ~ Jim Morrison

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    Senior Member blabbermouth Kees's Avatar
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    I never owned one but have been reading on them. Apparently they are hit and miss razors. Some reputable vendors sell them shave ready. IIRC at least one honemeister buys them by the 100, chucks the bad ones and sells the good ones shave-ready. You pay for the honing and the razors that are being disposed of in the process.
    Plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose. Jean-Baptiste Alphonse Karr.

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    Senior Member blabbermouth tcrideshd's Avatar
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    yes a hit and miss ,,but why bother there are plenty of good razors you can restore in the 10-20 range , that need work also and they would be worth something when done ,, heck I got a Kinfolks blue steel for 20 that only needed honing, and it will always be worth more than a GD, to each his own I guess, but if you polish a turd its still one but I,m glad that there being used and someone is finding a use for them good luck tc
    “ I,m getting the impression that everyone thinks I have TIME to fix their bikes”

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    i started with a cheapo razor
    almost turned me off straight razors

    I agree with tcrideshd

    restore a name brand one that will have resale value

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    Senior Member aa1192's Avatar
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    Are you saying my second hand GD store is a bust? Like I said it's nice to make mistakes fixing a GD rather than a vintage blade. I love restoring vintage though and spend most of my energy doing that. You are gonna probably make a good few mistakes your first restore FYI. One thing I wish I had known is hone a blade some before taking it apart so you can fix any heel shoulder issues before you polish it up.
    Dachsmith likes this.
    Razor rich, but money poor. I should have diversified into Eschers!

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    Senior Member blabbermouth Hirlau's Avatar
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    As I understand a few of the points that you made with the Gold Dollar; my thoughts are a little different.
    I am limited with my time, meaning that the son & other hobbies load up my agenda. I don't have the time or desire to start with a razor, that I know is lacking in overall quality, to practice with,,, whether it be honing or restoration. I have only restored about a dozen razors, learning from each as I go along. I pick a vintage razor with the hope of bringing out the best in it & putting it on the line for another 50 to 100 years. I don't see the advantage or investment coming from a Gold Dollar. No ,,, I don't own one nor do I dislike them,,, I just don't see them worth my time,,,,, JMO

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    Razor Vulture sharptonn's Avatar
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    I am..er...thinking of what you mean here. Are you saying that someone should develop skills on good razors with issues and progress to making magic on GD's after they learn? Why? Not kidding, just don't understand the logic. A gold dollar custom is exactly that. A custom gold dollar. Waste of time, IMO. Each to his own!
    Wolfpack34 likes this.
    "Don't be stubborn. You are missing out."
    I rest my case.

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