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Thread: Honing success!

  1. #1
    Now with honing skill!
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    Default Honing success!

    I've been working on my four razors for about 2 months with a set of Nortons and a Chinese 12K stone. Two of them were tolerably sharp, although one has a very very large smile to it. The third had a nick that I had to work out and the fourth, a new Double Arrow from eBay has stubbornly refused to become even tolerable.

    In the past two days, I've suddenly found myself with four shave-ready razors.

    I think (not 100% sure here) that the difference is using a properly lapped (flat) hone. I had been using the Norton flattening stone to do this for the 1k and 4k Nortons, and I had been able to get only parts of the edge close to sharp. Well, the other day, I pulled out my slab and sandpaper that I had been using to lap only the 8k stone. Wow! Big difference! The 1k and 4k hadn't been anywhere close to flat!

    The second thing is that I've started using a DMT fine stone to do most of the work. Then I go to a handfull or two of strokes on the 4k before getting into the polishing. I don't know why I didn't figure this out earlier--I'd used this stone to get the nick out of the one razor and it instantly became a pretty good shaver over most of the blade.

    It just seems like the 1k and 4k Nortons are slow cutters.

    Cliff Notes Version:
    1. Make sure the hones are flat
    2. Do the bulk of the job on the coarser stones

  2. #2
    The original Skolor and Gentileman. gugi's Avatar
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    Default

    This is good news

    However, the flattening hone should be more than enough do flatten. Did you check with say a pencil grid?
    And yes, if the two sides on the bevel don't met in an edge it can take a long time to do this on a norton 4k.

  3. #3
    Now with honing skill!
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    Admittedly, I don't use a pencil often. I did at first, then started going by the dark stuff that builds on the stone as you use it. I will try the flattening stone again, this time w/ pencil.

  4. #4
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    Congrats on your success, it's great when you can have your first comfortable shave with a self honed razor.It took me more than two months to realize that I should do the bulk of my honing on the lower grits, so you are way a head of me there, but that seems to be the key to honing, to spend enough time on the lower grits.

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