Coconut oil is the vegetable oil about least likely to go rancid, sounds good.i heard of coconut oil for food related blade care
Try something like this...Seriously, it may seem on the steeper side price wise, but once you spray a bit on your blade, it stays there. Carving wood can rub it off the bits on contanct with wood, but it'll protect every other area for weeks/months. If you're not carving wood, it'll stay put, for a long time. Thats my professional recommendation. There are other versions of the same thing... some might be cheaper, some more expensive, but this is the type of thing i use. I used to use oils, greases etc... tried many things over the years. Wouldnt use anything else now.Butchers block white oil (high purity mineral oil) is a good option if you want it to be food-safe.
Sometimes I rub a thin coating of petroleum jelly (such as Vaseline) over high carbon tools to protect them from moisture. Especially if they aren't going to be used for a long time. Unlike oils which lose viscosity when exposed to warm temperatures during the summer and can eventually run off the surface of the tool, petroleum jelly is thick and will stay in place permanently.
It depends on what type of tool I'm protecting, how often I intend to use it and and where it will be stored that decides which oil is used. For most tools I use a machine oil, sometimes I use petroleum jelly and if I'm feeling lazy or in a rush a quick spray of 4 in 1 oil (such as WD40) does the job well enough for shorter periods of time. For food-safe tools I always use butchers block white oil.
what's the "normal" purpose of that stuff?! buying online and getting anything shipped to central america is out of option due to the ridiculous shipping and import fees (+red tape), but maybe there's a local alternative...Try something like this...Seriously, it may seem on the steeper side price wise, but once you spray a bit on your blade, it stays there. Carving wood can rub it off the bits on contanct with wood, but it'll protect every other area for weeks/months. If you're not carving wood, it'll stay put, for a long time. Thats my professional recommendation. There are other versions of the same thing... some might be cheaper, some more expensive, but this is the type of thing i use. I used to use oils, greases etc... tried many things over the years. Wouldnt use anything else now.
RS PRO Hydrocarbon Lubricant Lubricant 400 ml Aerosol | RS
uk.rs-online.com
Many uses. Basically a dry lubricant. Same thing you'd use oil for, when you don't want oil all over other things.what's the "normal" purpose of that stuff?! buying online and getting anything shipped to central america is out of option due to the ridiculous shipping and import fees (+red tape), but maybe there's a local alternative...
Thanks for the suggestion. I'll give it a try.Try something like this...Seriously, it may seem on the steeper side price wise, but once you spray a bit on your blade, it stays there. Carving wood can rub it off the bits on contanct with wood, but it'll protect every other area for weeks/months. If you're not carving wood, it'll stay put, for a long time. Thats my professional recommendation. There are other versions of the same thing... some might be cheaper, some more expensive, but this is the type of thing i use. I used to use oils, greases etc... tried many things over the years. Wouldnt use anything else now.
RS PRO Hydrocarbon Lubricant Lubricant 400 ml Aerosol | RS
uk.rs-online.com