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03-09-2010, 04:52 PM #1
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Thanked: 3I give up. This is not worth it. I come here and post a question in the beginner's forum and this is the response I get?
Do I need to point out that 20 bucks spent is 20 bucks out the window and I don't learn how to do it myself? But the stone I'll have a good long time?
As for "getting a shave ready blade," that defeats the purpose. I don't want to spend the money for a second razor that will be redundant, and I don't want to pay somebody else to do what I can do myself.
And, seriously, we're talking about sharpening a blade here. Sure, skill is required. But I'll learn that skill - not pay somebody else to do it and use a "spoon feed ready" blade until I get around to it.
I asked 2 questions.
1 appears to have gone unanswered.
The other was answered with . . .
get some wet dry sandpaper.
pay to have somebody else do it.
spend 200 bucks on a redundant tool.
Take care.
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03-09-2010, 04:59 PM #2
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Thanked: 1262I am extremely sorry to offend you by offering advice. I will try to take a more helpful tone from now on.
Yes.. go find the cheapest sandpaper possible and hone until you have a 3/8 blade, then start a thread about how horrible dovo razors are. I look forward to it.
I made that comment about cost due to you saying want to save money and be cheap. Spending $90 on a hone vs $20 does not follow that logic. Unless you plan to purchase many razors and become the newest honester.
I recommended a second razor that is shave ready because you obviously have no idea what a shave ready razor should feel like.
Last edited by Slartibartfast; 03-09-2010 at 05:01 PM.
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03-09-2010, 05:07 PM #3
Here's your hat, there's the door .... what's your hurry ?
Be careful how you treat people on your way up, you may meet them again on your way back down.
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03-09-2010, 05:27 PM #4
You have people here with alot of shaving and maint experience giving you good advice here. If you wish to take it is of course your decision.
Since you are starting out you have two issues, one is whether the blade is shave ready or not and the other is your lack of shaving experience. Your problems can stem from one of the two or a combination of both.
My recommendation to you is take the advice you have been given and check out our Wiki which has primers for people starting out.
The last thing you want to do is take a quality razor and use it to experiment on how to hone. Many have taken that route and in the end most regret having done it.No matter how many men you kill you can't kill your successor-Emperor Nero
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03-09-2010, 05:41 PM #5
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Thanked: 3No doubt! And that's why I came here. But what I got back was juvenile sarcasm ("I can't wait for you to start the thread on how your razor brand sucks") and, from my perspective, defeatism.
Well, I'm a bit at ease because I bought the cheapest razor available - I generally test waters before I jump in. No sense spending 400 on a blade if I end up hating the process. Turns out I like it.
Next step - get better at sharpening.
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03-09-2010, 05:30 PM #6
Getting a shave ready razor as a newbie serves a number of very useful purposes and will ultimately allow you to learn how to hone your own razors and save money in the long run. You won't need to break the bank on a shave ready razor or getting your current razor honed.
The $20 or so you spend on getting a razor honed is, IMO, worth plenty more than $20 - in fact, it's worth more than a $90 hone. It certainly isn't "out the window." 1) you'll be able to shave with it, 2) you will learn what a properly honed razor feels like, 3) you will have a controlled razor to compare future razors you hone yourself to, 4) you will have a razor that can easily be touched up on a barber's hone or 12K with just a few laps, 5) you can learn proper shave technique by eliminating a variable in the process, namely whether or not the razor is shave ready.
The other posts are good advice, and I'd pretty much agree with all of them. In fact, if you read the Beginner's Section in the wiki, I think it suggests waiting to learn how to hone for some of these very reasons. Honing takes more than "a little skill" and regardless, if you've never had a shave ready razor you'll never know when you've done a good job. (Not to be mean or anything, but you're not paying $20 for something you can do. Otherwise, you'd have a shave ready razor without the problems you mentioned, wouldn't you?)
If you're really on a budget, go to the Classifieds and check Member services for someone who can hone a razor for less than $20, or you can buy a shave ready razor for $30 or $40. They're on there, just look. Of course, there are a few nice guys around who sometimes offer FREE honing to other nice guys... Sometimes.
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03-09-2010, 05:53 PM #7
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Thanked: 3But I shaved with it last night!
Point taken - but isn't "properly" a bit abstract? Once it shaves clean, easily, and without discomfort, is it not "proper"?!
I know when my knives are sharp, when my chisels are sharp, and when my chain blades are sharp, and I've never had any professionally done to have to know it.
Do some guys here not hone their own blades???
Well, you're right, I'll be able to do it in short order. No offense taken, but don't take offense back when I say - honing is a fairly simple process and the science behind it is easy and well known. It's a question only of learning how to do it, not whether I can do it. There's no mystery to it. It doesn't require a PhD. The proper tools with which to do it are readily available.
I read your reasons for spending the 20 (plus shipping, plus my time, plus gasoline and so on), but what it comes down to is this . . .
. . . the only compelling reason anybody's offered as to why it's worth 20 bucks if you are going to eventually hone yourself is because then you'll "know what it's supposed to feel like."
If I hone and I can shave in 5 minutes or less, closer than a store bought 3 blade, with no discomfort, then . . .
. . . is there an issue?
Anyway, this is just chasing my tail.
Let me put it this way - I'd rather spend 300 bucks on hones and many hours of my life learning to do it myself than pay another man to do it, and it seems to me that learning how to shave without knowing how to sharpen the blade you're using is putting the cart in front of the horse.
Learn how to care for the tool first, then learn how to use it.
As for "budget," I made enough money to retire at age 40, so money's not an issue. But the way I did that is by not paying other people to do things I can do myself, but for want of a little learning.
Good luck all. I'll be shaving no issues in short order - bet on it.
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03-09-2010, 05:37 PM #8
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03-09-2010, 06:00 PM #9
Well Frank, im sorry if your not getting the answers you want , so lets try to address the problem your having. Now im not at all a hone master but have honed a couple razors, and assuming the bevel was set(dont really know) then you might need to try the pyramid method seen hear [URL="http://straightrazorpalace.com/srpwiki/index.php/Pyramid_honing_guide"]http://straightrazorpalace.com/srpwiki/index.php/Pyramid_honing_guide[/URL
] and then maybe you need more of a finishing stone to get that ultra smooth feeling, (12k, ort CrOx on a balsa strop ect) but again thats just going to cost more money. Now i know people have honed razors on the norton 4/8 only im not sure what youve already done, if it seems to be working for you then i dont think you damaged it, so try the pyramid and see what happens, hope this helps!
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03-09-2010, 06:01 PM #10
sorry dint post the link right Pyramid honing guide - Straight Razor Place Wiki