Results 1 to 10 of 22
Thread: How many edges have you honed?
Hybrid View
-
01-19-2009, 12:19 AM #1
How many edges have you honed?
I'm not big on remembering anniversary dates or marking mile stones so I am just looking for educated guesses and round numbers. At our last Western NY meet Cassady made some comments about his usual honing style and I have been replaying it in the back of my head ever since and I assure you it is not intentional just the odd way my brain works and it brought me to my latest revelation. I then started thinking, how many edges did I hone prior to this revelation?
Well I have 100 and something straights and have gone though them all at least three timesimproving the edge as my skill improved and new hones were added. I've been honing since May of '08. I know it sounds a little weird to do the edges over and over again but I shave through all of them once and then start over. Up to now I have looked at my honing technique and stropping technique as two separate methods and probably was a bit anal about pressure and contact on the hone and felt the need to use two hands to be sure all parts of the edge were in contact with the hone when I wanted it to be. This weekend that changed.While I was able to get the HHT to perform on all straights before, now they pop w/o any effort. So...
I guess I have honed ~ 300 edges so far. My latest revelation in honing is to hold the razor as I would when stropping except run the edge first down the hone. Changing the hold on the straight while honing made me confident the edge was on the hone where I wanted it, improved the keenness of the edge and reduced my honing time by 2/3's.
Roughly, how many edges have you honed so far and what was your latest honing revelation?“If you always do what you always did, you will always get what you always got.” (A. Einstein)
-
01-19-2009, 04:57 AM #2
Hey Joe --
So I'm wondering exactly what I said! I hope it wasn't offensive
cass
-
01-19-2009, 09:47 AM #3
not at all Cassady.
More along the line of honing standing up and not being used to honing sitting down. Also the hold you were using on the blade. It's hard for me to put into words
because my thoughts are stored in pictures and now have my spin on them
, but it was good and the improvements in time and quality are noticeable. I can show you the change next time we meet. Thank you.
“If you always do what you always did, you will always get what you always got.” (A. Einstein)
-
01-19-2009, 12:06 PM #4
I'm not sure what you guys are talking about. I've lost track of how many edges I've honed, probably about the same number as you have, over a longer period of time. I've only been honing for 5-6 years but the first few years were sort of apprentice-ship type honing. I got one or two samples of each type of blade that was out there and studied them, but I've only had maybe 100 razors come through my house. I have two experimental razors, one carbon and one stainless that I've honed hundreds of times over just playing with different techniques.
I haven't had any honing revelations in years. I think the last revelation I had was when I noticed that adding pressure while honing damages the spine. Oh no, I take that back. About 2 weeks ago I noticed that bevel balance was an important characteristic of sharpness and its impossible to evaluate balance on a microscope. I remember thinking "Geez, I've got to find a test for that".
-
01-19-2009, 12:59 PM #5
- Join Date
- Feb 2008
- Posts
- 766
Thanked: 174I don't understand why you would ask the question. I drive my car every day but that doesn't mean I'm a good driver.
When I hone a razor I stop when it's sharp and make it comfortable on the strop and then shave with it for hopefully a month with a daily visit to the strop only. If it isn't comfortable I do it again.
I think if I honed razors daily rather than monthly, I would get quicker. I think if I honed different razors every day I would get more experienced. I think if I owned better hones, I could possibly do a better job.
I can hone a razor well enough that I don't need ask others to do it for me. I feel confident that I can make most razors shaving sharp.
But how many razors I've honed..........that's just repetitive isn't it.
-
01-19-2009, 01:29 PM #6
Joe --
Aaah, the standing up / sitting down thing.
I did have a realization last night: I was honing up an old Wostie I got in a lot from the 'bay. At some point in its life (or perhaps from the factory) someone had rounded off the heel significantly -- but not the toe. I was a little concerned that the rolling X would round off the spike at the toe, and the heel wasn't getting sharp with a traditional stroke.
I remembered something that ChrisL said a while ago about thin stones... so I tried using the edge of my Shapton to hone up the heel, which worked well.
My realization: There's always more to learn.
cass
-
01-19-2009, 09:17 PM #7
- Join Date
- Jan 2008
- Location
- Brighton, MA
- Posts
- 226
Thanked: 3I've dragged a handful of blades over the stones, but at this point my grand total of honed edges is...0.
I've got a good feeling about the current attempt though!
-
01-19-2009, 10:17 PM #8
Maybe 100 razors?
Counting all edges: knives, woodworking tools, tooling, etc... thousands (the majority being knives).
Much of it was on the DMT F red machinist hone in my current avatar. It's been riding around in my back left pocket; since 1986 or so.