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Thread: Microscope use when honing

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    I used Nakayamas for my house mainaman's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by JimmyHAD View Post
    I got this one here, Carson Micro Max 200, and I wouldn't recommend it. Poisoned my mind against those hand held types. My Widget supply 30x is at home and I am at work. I am pretty sure mine is a triplet. I got it a couple of years ago at the recommendation of Kaptain Zero on the forums IIRC. At work I have an old B&L Hasting's Triplet in 20x. A great little eye loupe optically but a 7mm objective takes some getting used to.
    those radio shack type sopes have adjustable eyepiece that can easily be moved from the optimal focus position and that makes it PITA to deal with(and the shallow depth of field). This 30x one does not have moving parts on it and once the focus is established its locked in place unless its intentionally changed. @ 30x the magnification is not much less than the Radio shack scope , just for illustration if the bevel looks like 7-8mm on the 100x radio shack scope , on this 30x one it looks like ~5mm wide with a lot more light, I was very pleasantly surprised by that.

    I use a 30X handheld microscope on every razor that I hone. It tells me all that I need to know.
    Forget the Radio Shack 60-100.
    Thanks to Randy for posting the link to that nice little scope.
    Stefan

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    Senior Member rickboone's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by mainaman View Post
    those radio shack type sopes have adjustable eyepiece that can easily be moved from the optimal focus position and that makes it PITA to deal with(and the shallow depth of field). This 30x one does not have moving parts on it and once the focus is established its locked in place unless its intentionally changed. @ 30x the magnification is not much less than the Radio shack scope , just for illustration if the bevel looks like 7-8mm on the 100x radio shack scope , on this 30x one it looks like ~5mm wide with a lot more light, I was very pleasantly surprised by that.


    Thanks to Randy for posting the link to that nice little scope.
    Which one did Randy post? Are you talking about the one on Ebay from the science seller guy? If so, they are sold out of those...anyone know where to get one?
    http://ashevillewetshavers.weebly.com/ April 26-27th come to one of the greatest meet ups of wet shavers!

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    I used Nakayamas for my house mainaman's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by rickboone View Post
    Which one did Randy post? Are you talking about the one on Ebay from the science seller guy? If so, they are sold out of those...anyone know where to get one?
    yes that is the one, after I got mine there were only 2 left.
    Stefan

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    Senior Member rickboone's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by mainaman View Post
    yes that is the one, after I got mine there were only 2 left.

    Ahh....darn.
    http://ashevillewetshavers.weebly.com/ April 26-27th come to one of the greatest meet ups of wet shavers!

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    Here are a few shots from my Veho USB microscope (Veho VMS-001 200x 1.3 Megapixel; $79.95 at JR.com) taken just a few mins ago after I started to perform the marker test on an Ontario cutlery razor that was part of a batch buy. This was really just a practice razor.

    The nice thing about a USB micro is that you can take and save pix and use them for reference either during the initial honing process, or later, when you might want to do touch ups.

    This one turns out to have a fair amount of chipping / pitting right where the bevel is.









    Another nice thing about the photo feature is that I can come back to these photos after I worked out the chips and have a gander. BTW, this was probably taken at 100x; I did not check.

    I find the microscope most useful on flea market find blades. I don't bother for touching up previously honed blades, or bother when honing something new out of the box. I just use a loupe to see how the bevel is progressing with the latter stuff.
    Last edited by Basset; 06-07-2010 at 12:22 AM.

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    crankymoose (06-07-2010)

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