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Thread: Chinese Waterstones
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03-27-2007, 11:06 AM #1
Chinese Waterstones
O.K., so I'm going down to visit my stepson, and he takes me into the Woodcraft store. Well I couldn't pass up the Chinese polishing waterstones they have. I get home and I'm having a hard time getting a bevel on them with my diamond hone. I mean these stones are hard! I'm wondering about a slurry now. How, on such a hard stone? Also, lapping. Norton flattening stone, or sandpaper/glass? What grit? These are all things I can try, obviously, but I can save time and sweat by asking anyone who's worked on these stones. I also don't want to ruin anything by using something on them I shouldn't. I also figure I can practice (honing) on this stone until Tony gets his German stones in. According to his write up those stones are hard too.
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03-28-2007, 01:59 AM #2
Soak and hone, thats all you have to do. No lapping, no slurry. Nada.
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03-28-2007, 11:09 AM #3
i have one of those chinese 12k's.. i like it, does a fine job and the cost is right. its a very slow cutting stone. so when you use it you need to do more strokes then you think you should.
as for flattening. i orginially flattened mine with sandpaper. it worked fine. rounded the corners a bit also. 800grit
then just the other day i flattened it again using a norton flattening hone and it was very very quick. the norton flattening hone just easts thru the chinese 12k. so be careful with that but it does work fine.
~J
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03-28-2007, 07:22 PM #4
I lapped mine using some 1K grit sandpaper from HA on one of their glass plates. I agree there is no real slurry produced with this stone.
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03-29-2007, 06:18 PM #5
- Join Date
- Feb 2007
- Location
- Midlands, England
- Posts
- 138
Thanked: 2they work the same way as japanese stones, just soak in water, and away you go, they make very little slurry