Results 11 to 20 of 63
Thread: How to use my Barber's Hone?
-
10-07-2010, 12:06 AM #11
- Join Date
- Jan 2008
- Location
- Rochester, MN
- Posts
- 11,552
- Blog Entries
- 1
Thanked: 3795Since you are new, I'll tell my story again...
I started straight shaving about 8 years ago. I lucked out and started with a Swaty and a Carborundum 102, which happen to be two of the best barber hones ever made. I fully honed some of my razors with the Swaty. That means I even set the bevel with the damn thing!
Anyway, for the past eight years, I have maintained some of my razors with nothing barber hones. Even after I found SRP and discovered Nortons, Naniwas, coticules, Eschers, etc., I continued to maintain a set of 7 razors in my locker at the gym. Even though I had hones at home that produced better edges, I continued to maintain my locker razors with just my barber hones. This gave me a means of comparison. I sort of felt that the locker razors were my pure old school razors. They are not as sharp or as comfortable as what I have at home, but I feel that they keep me honest and grounded with the old days.
-
-
10-07-2010, 12:11 AM #12
- Join Date
- Jan 2008
- Location
- Rochester, MN
- Posts
- 11,552
- Blog Entries
- 1
Thanked: 3795It depends on how it was honed previously. If it was honed with tape, then touch it up with tape. If not, then don't use tape.
Yes. Trust me, you don't want to set a bevel with a Swaty. If it was already shave ready, then you can use the Swaty for indefinite touch ups. If you start with a shave ready razor, then you can use a barber hone as soon as you notice any diminishment in the quality of the shave. Do a few laps on the barber hone, strop, and shave. Repeat as needed to maintain the quality of the shave.
-
The Following User Says Thank You to Utopian For This Useful Post:
bknesal (10-15-2010)
-
10-07-2010, 12:21 AM #13
+1 to everything Utopian said....
I too use a Swaty on a regular basis to maintain my "Shave Ready" razors. I use mine dry, that's up to you..To me, it's just easier...You'll be surprised how well they work...Just 3-5 strokes before you shave will keep your razors shave ready. Try doing one razor, as Utopian said, You'll see it will outlast your other razors when it comes time to hone...We have assumed control !
-
10-07-2010, 12:51 AM #14
- Join Date
- Aug 2010
- Location
- Vancouver, BC, Canada
- Posts
- 1,377
Thanked: 275There's an old barber's manual in the SRP Wiki that might help:
http://straightrazorpalace.com/srpwi...t_-_Honing.pdf
Charles
-
10-07-2010, 12:55 AM #15
- Join Date
- Aug 2010
- Location
- Vancouver, BC, Canada
- Posts
- 1,377
Thanked: 275On taping the spine:
Taping does two things:
1) It slightly raises the spine, and changes the honing angle of the edge;
2) It protects the spine from the hone, so it doesn't develop "hone wear".
If the bevel is good, and it was created with _no tape_, adding a layer of tape will give you a slight "compound bevel". I don't think most people have a problem with that.
If the bevel is good, and it was created _with tape_, you _must_ use tape for honing. Otherwise, your honing won't affect the cutting edge. [A picture is worth 1,000 words, and I can't draw.]
If the bevel isn't good, that's a whole other story.
Charles
-
10-07-2010, 01:16 AM #16
-
10-07-2010, 01:44 AM #17
I have two barber hones I especially like, and both are combination hones. One is the "Winner" hone and the folklore on it is that the two sides are roughly in the 3-5K range for the brown side and 8-10K range for the white side. I think of it as a portable, mini-Norton 4K/8K combo.
Then I have a hone that was sold under many name-brands-Dubl Duck, Reliance, Tonsorial Gem, O.V.B. and others. The surface of the hone is slick, and I tend to think of it as more strictly a touch-up hone. Mine happens to be the "Reliance" brand which I like because the brand is not embossed into the surface of the hone, meaning the whole hone is usable.
For lather, if I'm not shaving, I just wet my brush and swish it on the soap a few turns and that's it. Like Utopian said, just enough to break the surface tension of the water.
For fun, here are a couple pics:
-
10-07-2010, 01:48 AM #18
- Join Date
- Jan 2008
- Location
- Rochester, MN
- Posts
- 11,552
- Blog Entries
- 1
Thanked: 3795Both the Winner and Reliance hones are excellent. Each can produce perfectly good shaving edges.
-
10-07-2010, 01:54 AM #19
Are my impressions generally correct that in terms of function, the Winner is "lower" than the Reliance? The Winner really feels more like a small version of a "real" combination stone while the Reliance seems more like a traditional barber combo hone.
Does that sound right or have I let the slickness of the surface of the Reliance hone fool me?
-
10-07-2010, 02:16 AM #20
- Join Date
- Jan 2008
- Location
- Rochester, MN
- Posts
- 11,552
- Blog Entries
- 1
Thanked: 3795