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Thread: Slurry Dulling

  1. #81
    Senior Member blabbermouth engine46's Avatar
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    I just know from my own experience that a heavy slurry will cut more aggressively & while slowly diluting it will eventually get a keener polished edge & eventually finishing with water only. Once in a great while, I will encounter a piece of grit & stop there, rinse off my stone & go back to my previous stone starting over with that one just in case it got a scratch, rinsing it often to keep from happening again, then proceeding where I left off. My final strokes will get less & less water to polish the edge to a finer keen finish. I will then strop on the fabric about 15-20 strokes with crox or .25 diamond spray, then around 75-100 strokes leather. I don't have enough experience with Jnats to comment on them yet. I hope to in the future.
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    There is no charge for Awesomeness Jimbo's Avatar
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    What's in a slurry? It has to be water plus stuff from the hone plus, as you work the razor, teeny tiny bits of metal, right?

    The stuff from the hone can only be the abrasive particulates plus the (for lack of a better term) hone substrate - the stuff that binds the particles.

    And miscellaneous other things like some dust particles from the air, spider poo, etc that probably don't matter all that much. Or do you guys all hone in a hermetically sealed chamber...?

    So then it just boils down to the particulate and the substrate initially, and then as the honing goes on a more complicated particulate/substrate/metal bits interaction.

    How you release the "slurry" probably plays a role. If you rub the hone surface with a diamond plate you are probably ripping out chunks of substrate with particulates inside or attached, making little "nano hones" which are not lapped and just float around in the water doing their thing.

    Their thing is breaking down with friction I guess, and releasing the particulates they had embedded in them.

    That's all I've thought about so far. I have no idea what it means.

    One thing I will say is that I have noticed on more than one occasion that if I've used a mild slurry on my finishing Jnat (raised with a diamond plate) the edge doesn't plink arm hairs as crisply as it did immediately prior to the slurry strokes. However, after stropping that slurried edge it plinks arm hairs much better, usually.

    This to me means/suggests plastic deformation has happened. Only suggests, since I have never shaved straight off the hone - always stropped first. So all this could just be that my arm hair plinking technique is off.

    James.
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    Senior Member jnats's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by engine46 View Post
    I don't have enough experience with Jnats to comment on them yet. I hope to in the future.
    I will loan you one of mine for a month if you'll take care to send it back equally well packed and insured. Then we can all be opinionated about jnat slurry. Just PM me if you like.

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    Mental Support Squad Pithor's Avatar
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    Jnats, schmaynats. The term "slurry dulling" was coined specifically in relation to honing on a coticule. Coticule slurry does not break down; Japanese natural slurry (as far as I understand) does. So if there would be slurry dulling going on when using a slurry that breaks down into a finer slurry, the slurry would polish finer and finer as well as having a reduced slurry dulling effect as it breaks down, making the slurry dulling a non-issue.

    Quote Originally Posted by jnats View Post
    I think experts don't like to say- "sometimes I forget or struggle to get my timing of dilution just right and take the edge back a bit and wind up having to remove more steel and hone longer than if I had done it right the first time." and it's easier to remain infallible and blameless by inventing a mystical scapegoat term "Slurry dulling" I agree that it is a lot like religion.
    Except that it's not. The experts that came up with the term? Over on coticule.be, a lot of people I would consider more or less advanced users of/experts on honing with a coticule (who use the term "slurry dulling") mentioned their many (old and new) mistakes, problems and issues. They tended to blame their lack of skills on and understanding of the tool they were using, rather than the tool itself. They were quite a humble bunch in that, and never presented themselves as infallible.

    If you want to see the effect of slurry dulling:

    Take a coticule, raise a slurry, get the bevel set on a known well-performing razor and test for sharpness (as in: make sure the bevel is definitely properly set). Keep honing on the same slurry while adding one drop of water (to prevent the slurry from drying out) every thirty or so back-and-forth strokes for five/ten/fifty thousand minutes and test for sharpness again.

    My bet is that you will see no significant increase in sharpness. That is slurry dulling. That is why you dilute. On slurry, there is a plateau when an edge will not get sharper without diluting.
    Last edited by Pithor; 12-03-2015 at 10:23 PM.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Pithor View Post
    J
    If you want to see the effect of slurry dulling:

    Take a coticule, raise a slurry, get the bevel set on a known well-performing razor and test for sharpness (as in: make sure the bevel is definitely properly set). Keep honing on the same slurry while adding one drop of water (to prevent the slurry from drying out) every thirty or so back-and-forth strokes for five/ten/fifty thousand minutes and test for sharpness again.

    My bet is that you will see no significant increase in sharpness. That is slurry dulling. That is why you dilute. On slurry, there is a plateau when an edge will not get sharper without diluting.
    In your thoughts the edge reaches a plateau and remains there. I see your point. But then why is this called dulling?
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    Quote Originally Posted by jnats View Post
    I would of course be wrong and debating a silly thing, as it's semantics and particles of gypsum dust or sand and dirt or gluons are all particles- it's a word, and it has multiple uses and frames of significance.
    Quote Originally Posted by 32t View Post
    In your thoughts the edge reaches a plateau and remains there. I see your point. But then why is this called dulling?
    Perhaps these two thoughts are not unlinked...

    While its easy to dismiss things we disagree upon as silly semantics, perhaps the term dulling is not referring to the edge but the slurry itself? .be is the Belgian domain so perhaps we have misunderstood what they are referring to?

    Perhaps slurry dulling is the process of the slurry becoming dull or rather reaching the end of its usefulness at that particular dilution?

    Just a thought. I'm no expert at honing or using coticules but I am rather excellent with language.
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    There is no charge for Awesomeness Jimbo's Avatar
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    OK, I can work with that as a definition. My question is then why? What is going on that undiluted slurry is not increasing the sharpness/smoothness? Is it providing a barrier between the edge and the hone surface so that new garnets are no longer being released or exposed? Or are they being exposed but at a sub-optimal rate? What is it about diluting the slurry that increases the abrasive power of the hone?

    It sounds like there's a slurry sweet-spot. No slurry seems sub-optimal. Too much (undiluted) slurry leads to a sub-optimal outcome as well.

    James.
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    Senior Member jnats's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by jnats View Post
    Name:  water.jpg
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    Quote Originally Posted by mainaman View Post
    How does that address the OP question?
    Quote Originally Posted by jnats View Post
    Sorry, it was a cheeky attempt to say: If people are finding the slurry dulls their edge, I would suggest diluting. Slurry like many things- less is more. --without taking away any fun that OP may have been looking forward to in a planned debate of a very dubious term.
    i.e. That was me 'sitting back and drinking a glass of water while watching a slurry dulling debate unfold'

    edit: ...but perhaps I've said too much
    Quote Originally Posted by Pithor View Post
    Jnats, schmaynats. The term "slurry dulling" was coined specifically in relation to honing on a coticule. Coticule slurry does not break down; Japanese natural slurry (as far as I understand) does. So if there would be slurry dulling going on when using a slurry that breaks down into a finer slurry, the slurry would polish finer and finer as well as having a reduced slurry dulling effect as it breaks down, making the slurry dulling a non-issue.



    Except that it's not. The experts that came up with the term? Over on coticule.be, a lot of people I would consider more or less advanced users of/experts on honing with a coticule (who use the term "slurry dulling") mentioned their many (old and new) mistakes, problems and issues. They tended to blame their lack of skills on and understanding of the tool they were using, rather than the tool itself. They were quite a humble bunch in that, and never presented themselves as infallible.

    If you want to see the effect of slurry dulling:

    Take a coticule, raise a slurry, get the bevel set on a known well-performing razor and test for sharpness (as in: make sure the bevel is definitely properly set). Keep honing on the same slurry while adding one drop of water (to prevent the slurry from drying out) every thirty or so back-and-forth strokes for five/ten/fifty thousand minutes and test for sharpness again.

    My bet is that you will see no significant increase in sharpness. That is slurry dulling. That is why you dilute. On slurry, there is a plateau when an edge will not get sharper without diluting.
    ...........sip.

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    There is no charge for Awesomeness Jimbo's Avatar
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    Thinking about it a bit more. You'll have to forgive me since, although I have owned a few over the years, I've never really looked into coticules in any kind of depth.

    First, if it is true that garnets do not break down then the only other option for them (apart from remaining completely whole, which is probably not happening) is that the little obtuse angled edges are rounding with wear. Does that sound plausible?

    So consider a single garnet in isolation rolling around in a slurry, bumping up against other garnets and the razor and the hone surface etc. Eventually, if it stays in the system long enough (and assuming they don't split into bits), that garnet will end up for all intents and purposes a sphere rather than a rhombic dodecahedron as the edges wear away. I mean, they are close anyway I think - like little soccer balls, basically.

    So I think I can imagine a heavy slurry of spherical garnets forming a layer between stone and edge, much like ball bearings. The bits of garnet sticking out of the hone that might actually abrade cannot reach the steel, and they don't release from the hone either because of the protective layer, thus a sharpness plateau.

    It's a theory anyway.

    I guess the only problem is how do you know it's a plateau and not just the limit of the hone when your edge ceases to increase in sharpness. I mean it cannot increase forever, can it?

    James.
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    32t
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jimbo View Post
    Thinking about it a bit more. You'll have to forgive me since, although I have owned a few over the years, I've never really looked into coticules in any kind of depth.

    First, if it is true that garnets do not break down then the only other option for them (apart from remaining completely whole, which is probably not happening) is that the little obtuse angled edges are rounding with wear. Does that sound plausible?

    So consider a single garnet in isolation rolling around in a slurry, bumping up against other garnets and the razor and the hone surface etc. Eventually, if it stays in the system long enough (and assuming they don't split into bits), that garnet will end up for all intents and purposes a sphere rather than a rhombic dodecahedron as the edges wear away. I mean, they are close anyway I think - like little soccer balls, basically.

    So I think I can imagine a heavy slurry of spherical garnets forming a layer between stone and edge, much like ball bearings. The bits of garnet sticking out of the hone that might actually abrade cannot reach the steel, and they don't release from the hone either because of the protective layer, thus a sharpness plateau.

    It's a theory anyway.

    I guess the only problem is how do you know it's a plateau and not just the limit of the hone when your edge ceases to increase in sharpness. I mean it cannot increase forever, can it?

    James.
    Going with these thoughts. If the garnets would degrade they would loose the ability to abrade the steel. They would get finer and finer cutting until they become "ball bearings". At that point you would again reach a plateau. If you would refresh the slurry you would then again start with courser garnets and degrade the edge. (Dulling that not the slurry. )

    By diluting the slurry there would be less garnets to spread the pressure and therefore wear them out faster. If you would time the rate of dilution (dulling of the garnets) and the sharpness of the edge you could theoretically get them to become optimal at the same time.
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