After listening to my tale of woe, the good Doctor took my skates back into the inter sanctum. The first thing he did was to place my left boot up side down on a cobbler's anvil and rest a steel straight edge against the side of the blade. The blade proved badly warped. The right blade was also warped but not as much. Hey, maybe it's not all me after all! If you look at the end of the work bench closest to the camera, you will see a blade straightening tool. Basically this is a flat platform with a steel wheel on a handle which can be moved horizontally along the side of the blade, allowing pressure to be applied at targeted locations. Mike quickly tweaked the blades on this truing stand and worked the warp out of both. One of the best parts of going to Skater's Paradise is that Mike has an agreement with rink management so that he can put skaters out on the ice for a few minutes after a modification to see if a particular tweak is an improvement or not. After remounting my blades we did this. The ice at the Capital Clubhouse Rec Center proved to be fast hockey ice which amplified the fact that my blades also needed sharpening--I could barely hold a right edge (which is what my ice dance coach had picked up on). It's always a good thing if the patient can present the symptoms in front of the physician--this is usually not my luck with either medical issues or car repairs, but I digress. We came off the ice and Mike took the right blade off again and made up a couple of shims from a sheet of thin plastic material. We on-ice tested several positions and thicknesses under the outside portion of my right blade before Mike was satisfied with my edge. I was both impressed and humbled by the amount of time he took with a low level figure skater who showed up at his door with middling level equipment. This, after all, is a man who has been the US figure skating Olympic team's skate technician for several Olympiads and has worked on the blades and boots of elite skaters. |
Wow!
ReplyDeleteI think we should expect much improved performance -- Looking forward to a full report.
@Amy: Oh dear, Oh dear! (that's what I like about you--no performance pressure) I can report some improvement from yesterday's foray on the ice (a moves in the field lesson at 0-dark thirty, an ice dance lesson a few hours later, plus a public session in the afternoon) but don't look for my autograph on anyone's T-shirt in the immediate future! Blades were a little spooky at first but feeling great now.
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