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Thread: HHT Levels?
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09-28-2013, 03:00 AM #1
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Thanked: 284All I know is I'm quickly resembling an Olympic swimmer after these once hairy arms have been subjected to countless HHTs.
I love living in the past...
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sharptonn (09-28-2013)
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09-28-2013, 03:09 AM #2
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09-28-2013, 03:19 AM #3
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09-28-2013, 03:33 AM #4
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Thanked: 1371There is no need to go off-site for the information; we have it here: Hanging Hair Test, from trick to probing method - Straight Razor Place Wiki. (see section 3 for the HHT numbers)
I don't use HHT numbers.
The thing that's most important to realize is that one guy's HHTx is not the same as another's. HHT4 for me might be HHT3 for you. When someone posts "I just bought the flavor of the day Wonder-Hone and got HHT5!!!!" it's pretty much a meaningless post (but HHT5 sounds cool, right?). Even if I did know what their HHT5 translates to for me, I still don't know if they have a good shaving edge.
Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
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cosperryan (09-28-2013)
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09-28-2013, 10:55 AM #5
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09-28-2013, 01:25 PM #6
I gave the reference to the Library article on the first page of this thread and, being tired of arguing the point, I thought I'd just let it go at that, but......
Despite all the negative press the HHT gets, lots of guys who are well-respected here use it and use it productively.
What doesn't work is for a new guy to pick up a hair, apply it to a blade of unknown sharpness and try to make some conclusion from the result.
The HHT is certainly NOT bullshit.
With the help of a respected mentor here (whose name I won't mention because of the inevitable HHT backlash), I worked on getting the HHT to a point where I could really use it to my advantage. The result of that is that it is an indispensable part of my honing routine.
Hair variability is not an issue for me. I have collected hairs from friends, male and female, and have two sandwich bags full of them. Of course they are all different, but that is a plus, not a minus.
I don't bother with HHT testing (and never worry about HHT numbers, although I see the point of them), until I get a razor close to shave ready. Usually that is somewhere in my progression from 8K to 12K and then on to the Gokumyo for finishing (and, yes, my expensive Escher now goes unused).
The truth is that if I didn't have the HHT, I wouldn't know when to stop honing. I have gotten to the point that using the HHT tells me, without fail, when a razor will shave well. I use different hairs, observe the results, and when finer hairs are getting snipped easily, I know the blade will shave. I can take any blade I have out of my storage cabinet, check it with the HHT and know whether it will shave or needs a touch-up.
There is no question that the shave is the most important thing, but I'll be damned if I'm going to have to lather up and shave to test a blade when I have found an easier, quicker and infallible way of checking the edge while I'm honing. With all the different hairs I have to test with, and with the experience I have developed in years of using it, it NEVER fails to predict precisely how the shave will be.
Why doesn't it work for Newbies? It doesn't work for the same reason that a person who has just learned to drive can't be expected to jump into a 1963 427 Chevrolet Impala SS and turn a sub-13 second quarter mile. It takes practice and experience to achieve success in either case. But don't blame failures on the HHT, anymore than you'd blame the 427 for missing shifts or a bad start. It's not the test that is at issue, but the talent and experience of the person taking the test.
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sheajohnw (09-28-2013)
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09-28-2013, 06:08 PM #7
I'm not sure why you're so worked up. You are using HHT because it's faster than lathering. You are saying a variety of hairs is a plus and you have bagfuls of them to help you perform your test.
You're presenting the HHT as the ultimate test to tell you when you need to stop honing. Apparently you don't use it to tell you when to switch hones. Why? Perhaps it is because there is a faster test that tells you that and that's what you are using.
What if I tell you that some of the best honers I know use only the visual and tactile feedback of the honing stroke to know when the razor is not progressing any further and they are done honing. It's far simpler than what you are doing with multiple or special hairs.
You know what makes the experience in this post http://straightrazorpalace.com/begin...ng-honing.html so special - the teacher customizing the instructions to the needs of the student.
And yes, Alan is among the best.
Now, if you need HHT to tell you when to stop honing what test do you use to tell you when to stop stropping? Have you considered performing that test during honing?