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05-16-2008, 05:58 AM #1
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Thanked: 369This all assumes that Verhoeven, and even Zowada, are competent straight razor honers and stroppers.
And if not?
Scott
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05-16-2008, 10:50 AM #2
No, not completely. Its really the pictures that tell the tale. For example, a disciplined stroke, maintaining edge alignment to keep the teeth in proper opposition, could also simply be producing a better finer edge.
What I think we need to develop is a firm grasp of the characteristics of straight razors and develop a theory from there. As long as there are phenomenon we don't completely understand, then our theories will remain to have holes in them.
For example, a dull razor will not produce draw on a strop, only a sharp one. Also, linen is said to help the shaving edge because its bumpy surface is said to reapply some toothiness to the edge (and that overtime a strop over smoothes an edge). What characteristics we believe should have applicable experiments that go with them, or easily disprove them.
I think we should come to a concensus on the phenomenon and characteristics we see and know.
The razor in the VH experiments were honed by a man who "used a straight razor" and your right Scott that that doesn't exactly mean that he understood striational theory to get the best shave. On the other hand it could simply be that "stropping is king" and that great shaves are simply a product of the best/most stropping technique.
I have found, over time, that some striational theory support like "then its best to use a scything motion" don't really apply very well in practice. The importance of scything seems to reflect simply how sharp the edge is.
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05-16-2008, 11:29 AM #3
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Thanked: 346Honing not stropping was the main focus of Verhoeven's paper - he was really trying to look at what the woodworkers were doing since straight razor shaving was and remains a rare curiosity. He included a commercial razor blade and a hand-honed straight razor in his photos because those are good reference examples of the sharpest machine-honed edge and hand-honed edge. But because shaving wasn't his main focus he didn't have any shots of linen-stropped steel or of leather-stropped post-shave steel. He did have shots of a freshly honed edge before and after stropping on leather to see if it removed the burr (it didn't). He repeated the test using felt as the stropping medium (also popular among woodworkers) and found that it did remove the burr - though it was by abrasion and not by breaking it off as was the common theory among woodworkers.
Verhoeven may well be an indifferent honer but his microscope would have told the tale if his edges were markedly subpar. If you haven't downloaded the paper at that link I included in my first post in this thread you really should, because the level of detail in those 3000x photos is quite astonishing.Last edited by mparker762; 05-16-2008 at 11:43 AM.
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05-16-2008, 01:52 PM #4
First off let me say that I am very new to the straight shaving world so what follows is just ideas formed while reading this post and line of comments. I welcome all to pick them apart at will without worry of offending me. I'm a big boy.
I would have to imagine that any material that comes to an edge like a straight razor will look serrated at a high enough magnification. Unless it's a perfect crystal lattice, and probably still even then, when you zoom in close enough there is always micro-chipping, fissures, etc. So when you hone you're just removing microscopic particles bit by bit untill you get that edge as close to perfect as you can. The cutting of hairs in my opinion is more of a cleaving effect of a fine edge.
Now as soon as you stop honing oxidation starts in, and we know from peoples experience that oxidation happens extremely fast on a visual level so we can assume that it occurs even faster on a microscopic one. I believe that the friction of stropping scrapes away this oxidation, smoothing out the edge again. A linen strop, providing more friction does so faster and easier. Now over time you are removing this microscopic oxidation causing your edge to round again and reducing it's ability to cleave the hair, thus a touch up is needed.
As far as drag on the strop is concerned this is my opinion on that. You're done honing and right away the oxidation starts, this creates a microscopic rough edge which reduces the total area of contact on the strop. As you strop and remove the oxidation the total area of contact increases and you are in effect getting the razor closer to the strop, on a microscopic level atleast. If I remember correctly there is a physical phenomena in which when two things are placed extremely close to each other they start to pull together, and I mean microscopically close. Similar to the force you feel when you bring two magnets close together without them touching. I feel this increased attraction would cause the increase in drag.
This is my opinion on all this. Right or wrong? Let me know what you think.
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05-16-2008, 03:55 PM #5
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Thanked: 369Admittedly, then, the Verhoeven studies are not straight razor specific. Extrapolating what happens with wood worker's tools to straight razors seems prone to flaws.
What's needed is the same type of study, but with razors honed and stropped by a variety of experienced straight razor users.
Until then, the Verhoeven work doesn't hold much water for me. I've seen the photos, but for all I know those are photos of crappy edges, in terms of "shave ready" that is.
ScottLast edited by honedright; 05-16-2008 at 03:59 PM.
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05-16-2008, 04:28 PM #6
I don't know whether or not this is correct, but I have a suspicion that some of what people say they feel while stropping is like what dowsers feel when they want to believe they are nearing their goal. Placebo effect / power of belief / etc. I also find it hard to believe that physically observable sharpness can be compared to effective sharpness for cutting hair on one's face. However I would be delighted to be found wrong on these points, as it would magnify the mystique of straight razor sharpness for me!
Find me on SRP's official chat in ##srp on Freenode. Link is at top of SRP's homepage
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05-16-2008, 05:07 PM #7
I buy that, size of bevel, and of spine has a bigger effect on draw IMHO. I have razors that give little/lots of draw regardless of shave readyness...
Here's something I have noticed over time: the sound of the razor as I strop it is different from shave ready to not shave ready razors. Kind of a sizzle, if that makes sense. Regardless of the grind, I can hear when the razor is getting close to shave ready.
It may be psychosomatic, but that just means my subconscious knows when a razor is about ready, even if I'm not sure yet. Either way it works for me.
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05-16-2008, 05:38 PM #8
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Thanked: 150Mparker, your point depends which photo you are talking about. The one in the top right corner is not indicative of a good razor edge. I intended to use the bottom two as examples (I posted this pic in a different thread and clarified which pic was which then, but forgot to do so this time). The bottom two show the slight misalignment and bending that can occur with use, and it's those small irregularities that I was referring to not the obvious burrs in the top photos.
As for my stropping comment, is it incorrect to say that it is a matter of friction? It seems to me that as the edge is straightened the friction would be increased slightly (not to mention the strop heats up a bit which adds to the draw).
And it's not too far of a stretch to compare knives and chisels to razors edges if they've been honed to the same degree. I've been honing knives longer than honing razors and I can say that it pretty much boils down to the interaction of steel and the abrasive surface, no magical difference because you label one of them a "razor".
I think what matters is that we can all take dull steel, d*$& around with it, and end up with a tool that pops hairs in half while gliding like a feather over skin. So, cheers! I've got some sharpnin' to do.Last edited by Russel Baldridge; 05-16-2008 at 05:41 PM.
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05-16-2008, 05:54 PM #9
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Thanked: 369Not a far stretch, yet still a stretch. Can one shave with a chisel, or a knife, with the same results as a properly honed and stropped straight razor?
No difference in the metal composition or the forging of a straight razor that might affect the honing results?
What I'm asking is, are they really all the same, just different shapes? Or is there something other than shape that makes a straight razor a straight razor?
ScottLast edited by honedright; 05-16-2008 at 06:10 PM.
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05-16-2008, 11:05 PM #10
I'd have to agree that there is no important difference with the big exception that the bevel angle of a razor is very small and that of a chisel is much bigger. If we ever start using chisels with a scything motion I'll be really worried.
But, if we were to sharpen a chisel with the express purpose of shaving with it (or just cutting a hair), would we do it differently?
I'm much more worried that Scott's or MParker's razors are different than my razors. That would be a much more important issue to me.
I think it makes more sense to focus on the unexplained and the explainable phenomenon, agree on that, and go from there.
For example:
You have the guy that doesn't even believe in strop draw, or,
Back to the corn field example, I think razors shave because the corn field is serrated on the edge by the grit of the stone, but only because it "catches" whiskers a little in the groove, which may explain why "fewer strokes are better". With too many strokes per grit you smooth out the bevel edge too much.
But until you experience the lack of shaving ability from too many strokes on a hone (or agree that the characteristic is true) you might not see the concept or idea at all.
We could debate the presence of striations for a long time before we ever get around to accepting that the effect is more important than whether they exist or not.
Lets say, for the sake of argument, that striations are only visible at 5K magnification and suddenly we "see" all these striations. How do we ever figure out that they are cutting better or worse? Without interviewing the effected whisker after the crime.
Until they invent a hone without grit we have to focus on experiments that study the expected characteristics.
For example, a few years ago I worked with someone that used a sweeping motion while honing and, although he was getting a good edge, got a better shaving edge when he used a simpler more linear stroke. I thought this helped because it aligned the "striations". Now I think it helped because it created "fewer" striations.
I can agree that striations exist on the bevel, I think what we are questioning is the age old assumption that they make a difference and to what extent they make a difference.
And, to the question I have, how can we create a logical experiment that would prove of disprove our theories?