Page 5 of 6 FirstFirst 123456 LastLast
Results 41 to 50 of 59
Like Tree2Likes

Thread: BUBBLING GOTICULE

  1. #41
    Senior Member blabbermouth hi_bud_gl's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Posts
    4,521
    Thanked: 1636

    Default

    After keeping this stone 4 hours in distilled water and lapping 45 minutes until 1k i did test it again.
    At first i have to say bubbles comes way less then it was before. if slurry is consentrated more bubbles smaller and vs verse.
    This make me think Owner of this stone used soap for a long time that is why they are coming out. ( this is just opinion.) i start to test it is quality it still does exact work before. i should say wonderful edge . i haven't shave test it but i will test it later.
    Below more picutres after washing and lapping . I made couple picture to compare my another coticules Natural combo and another one seems like wood root.enjoy.
    Attached Images Attached Images      

  2. The Following User Says Thank You to hi_bud_gl For This Useful Post:

    Smokintbird (09-27-2009)

  3. #42
    Unique. Like all of you. Oldengaerde's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2009
    Location
    Uithof - NL
    Posts
    518
    Thanked: 327

    Default

    The lather/soap-theory doesn't convince me: soap and lather dry far to quickly to penetrate any significant depth into the stone. And as it is very soluble in water, the effect wouldn't be very long lasting - especially after repeated lapping, rinsing and soaking. Also: detergent would have bubble-generating properties with and without slurry.

    Especially after seeing these latest pics, I think it's oil residue. It is a largish stone, as used by carpenters. They often used coticules, especially the harder ones, with oil. This changes the colour to a particular type of bland hue with light (even greyish) and dark blemishes, especially when dry, at the same time lending it a more 'transparent' (butterscotch texture like) aspect.

    Oil would eventually penetrate a coticule, and can't easily be gotten out. A mixture of oil residue and very fine (because hard) coticule powder could produce a bubbling mixture with water. It would explain the difference with and without slurry.

    I've got a large carpenters' coticule that was used with oil too. I don't usually use it with slurry, but will try and see if I can get to make it to bubble.

  4. #43
    Coticule researcher
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    Belgium
    Posts
    1,872
    Thanked: 1212

    Default

    I can verify that come substances are capable of penetrating a Coticule.
    I had this hone, made from a piece of raw Coticule, that I had picked up at an old abandoned mine.
    The slab of stone I managed to cut out of the rock, turned out with a small cavity. I filled the void with a paste I made from candle wax and Coticule powder. I heated the stone till the molten pasted started to flow into the void.
    To my surprise also the surrounding area absorbed part of the wax. I lapped a good part of the hone, but the slight discoloration stayed visible. There was no disadvantage for honing. The stone performed as good as before (I only filled the void for cosmetic purposes) and I don't recall any foaming (wax isn't oil of course).

    Here's a picture:

    You can clearly see where the wax soaked into the hone.
    As far as Neil Millers excellent post goes:

    As far as I know, Coticule layers are all sandwiched between Blue schist. Some of that schist contains enough spessartine garnets to have honing qualities of its own. (Belgian Blue whetstone).

    Here's a list of the mineralogical components of Coticules:
    Spessartine (the actual garnets)
    Muscovite
    Paragonite
    Quartz
    Chlorite Mg (a greenish mineral)
    Hematite (little in Coticule, a lot in BBW)
    Apatite
    Rutile (titanium dioxide, a very common pigment in white paint)
    Koalinite (also common in paint and as filler in paper production)
    Andalousite

    I lack the knowledge to really tell if some of those would form a suspension with water that easily foams. Titanium dioxide and Kaolinite seem the most likely candidates in that field. Kaolinite (2 Mohs) is one of the softest elements found in Coticules. We are talking about a very soft stone that forms slurry from merely rubbing a razor over it. So we should probably look at those elements in the first place.
    Chlorite (2.5 Mohs) is very soft as well, but in high concentration it would add a typical green hue to the hone.

    Beware that I am talking about "Coticule" rock as it is found in the Venn Stavelot massive in Belgium. Coticule formation in the geological sense is a very interesting phenomenon and well studied all around the world. Not all Coticule formations have the same mineralogical composition so we have to be careful with quoting literature about other finding spots of Coticule (with too impure or narrow veins for honing purposes).

    Best regards,
    Bart.
    Last edited by Bart; 09-27-2009 at 11:33 PM.

  5. The Following User Says Thank You to Bart For This Useful Post:

    niftyshaving (12-27-2009)

  6. #44
    Senior Member blabbermouth hi_bud_gl's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Posts
    4,521
    Thanked: 1636

    Default

    I would say this i am not going to mess around with that stone anymore. i was looking for similar one for a long time.
    I assume Bart is sitting on them that is why he is talking so high about coticules. He may send me one just for try. i will send back i promise .

  7. #45
    The Hurdy Gurdy Man thebigspendur's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2005
    Location
    New Mexico
    Posts
    32,770
    Thanked: 5017
    Blog Entries
    4

    Default

    They talk about rocks being permeable or impermeable to water which is why when you have an aquifer there is always a cap rock which is impermeable to water which seals the water to within the permeable layers. However no rock is entirely uniform so there are little fissures and over time water will get in and get through the rock. One of the reasons mines will fill with water and have to be pumped out to a degree depending in the morphology of the rock strata.
    No matter how many men you kill you can't kill your successor-Emperor Nero

  8. #46
    Coticule researcher
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    Belgium
    Posts
    1,872
    Thanked: 1212

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by hi_bud_gl View Post
    I would say this i am not going to mess around with that stone anymore. i was looking for similar one for a long time.
    I assume Bart is sitting on them that is why he is talking so high about coticules. He may send me one just for try. i will send back i promise .
    Sham,

    I am aware that we both appreciate Coticules, albeit we seem to appreciate them somewhat differently. There is also no doubt in my mind that you are a trustworthy person, and I will be happy to lend you one of my small personal collection. The only question is: which one.
    You see, for me they all perform the same. The edges I get form either one of my Coticules are all so closely the same that I can't discern any differences on my face.
    I do find differences between the way the hones work, but that is in their speed and also in how much a slurry prevents the edge of taking ample keenness. But once I am finished dealing with that by using a few tricks to get past the "slurry barrier", I really find it impossible to differentiate between any Coticule I ever tested.

    I haven't met one that formed foam, like yours does, and I have only met two, maybe three Coticules, that could produce an edge I'd consider shave-worthy coming off slurry. None of which are in my possession, they were all stones I tested with permission of Ardennes Coticule or because a fellow SRP-member asked me to pick one for him during a visit at the quarry. After going through my usual procedure, finishing with pure water, it didn't make a difference for me anyway, so I didn't even bother purchasing one of those myself, being already way over my budget of what I once expected to spend on straight razor shaving... (aren't we all? )

    If you are interested in borrowing a Coticule, drop me a PM, and we'll figure out which one.

    Bart.

  9. #47
    Beard growth challenged
    Join Date
    Feb 2009
    Location
    Berlin
    Posts
    1,928
    Thanked: 402

    Default

    This post is almost unreadable now.
    Please use some breaks
    or resize that picture, Bart.

  10. #48
    Senior Member blabbermouth hi_bud_gl's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Posts
    4,521
    Thanked: 1636

    Default

    yes i did smell it . it smells like earth . no soap etc. i did sharpen 2 blade which is belong to srp member. why i choose them it was the best suet. 1 is hallow ground and another one is near wedge or 1/4 hallow. i took the blades to shave test . I was correct shave is so smooth unbelievable. I knew i am not making mistake about how fine edge puts edge to the blade but wanted make sure. i was right .Excellent edge. i will ask srp member who owns the blade to leave his feedback about the shave he gets from this stone.
    This is what i did.
    1k norton
    3k japan diamond plate Lynn gave to me
    8 k norton but didn't get sharpest edge from it intentionally i stop in the middle
    next i move to this stone
    i made almost 50 laps with slurry
    25 laps without slurry
    then 25 laps on the leather strop ( iam so lazy person never do more then 30 laps on strop)
    next take to shave .
    Result
    Excellent.
    Bart size of the stone doesn't matter to me as long as i can keep inside my palm. But i want the best stone .best final edge putting stone.
    no pastes etc.this is the picture of the 2 blades as you can see they still have tape on them
    Attached Images Attached Images  

  11. #49
    Little Bear richmondesi's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2009
    Location
    Shreveport, LA
    Posts
    1,741
    Thanked: 760

    Default

    This is a mystery to be sure. I'll tell you though, it's not good for my HAD. :frown:

    You know, Sham, maybe it's a mystery that will be never resolved. Good thing it puts a great edge on a stone, though.

  12. #50
    Hones/Honing/Master Barber avatar1999's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2009
    Location
    Waynesboro, PA
    Posts
    997
    Thanked: 199
    Blog Entries
    6

    Default

    I would be the same way Sham. Such a great looking stone that puts a great edge on razors AND bubbles while you do it, I wouldn't want to change it either.

    You can take pride in having such a unique coticule in your collection

    If it were me, I think I would take a very fine paint brush, and some ink, and write on the edge something like "Fizzy, the Bubbling Coticule" in a nice Spencerian script (another of my hobbies )

    Kinda like its own little stamp of pride

    Ok, yeah...I'm losing it...naming hones? I've got it bad. Next thing you know I'll be talking to them too

    Quote Originally Posted by hi_bud_gl View Post
    I would say this i am not going to mess around with that stone anymore. i was looking for similar one for a long time.
    I assume Bart is sitting on them that is why he is talking so high about coticules. He may send me one just for try. i will send back i promise .

Page 5 of 6 FirstFirst 123456 LastLast

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •