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Thread: Found another hone. Need help
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04-05-2014, 07:59 PM #1
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Thanked: 169Found another hone. Need help
This time I found a natural stone. This one is exciting in these sense that it came from the same place/lot of stuff that yielded my 1790s stubtail awhile back. Hone was bought in appalling shape. It looked like someone mistook it for a piece of cheese and kept trying to cut through it at right angles to itself. I picked the side with the most uniform abuse and have been lapping it. I am not having a terribly hard time. I think in about two hours I will have a level, uniform surface. No oil whatsoever was in this. Stone is incredibly slick. On the back end I am not lapping, there is a large green blotch of stone. Slanted saw marks on both ends. Stone is greenish blue with some green jello colored blobs mixed in. Have included photos of what the stone is giving off during lapping. Has been a painless process so far. Been using 220 to do the heavy lifting of getting gouges out.
Last edited by kcb5150; 04-05-2014 at 08:02 PM.
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04-05-2014, 08:01 PM #2
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Thanked: 169
This was my start point for the first photo.
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04-07-2014, 09:40 AM #3
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Thanked: 169
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04-07-2014, 09:42 AM #4
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Thanked: 169
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04-07-2014, 09:46 AM #5
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Thanked: 169This hone is absolutely littered with irregular green blotches of all sizes throughout. More than the camera is successfully showing. I finished lapping it with some worn down 2000 grit on a very light slurry off the stone. It really brought out the fine details. It feels phenomenally fine. Took 5ish hours total to lap from a state similar to the gash-ridden non-working side. I wouldn't say it was back breaking to lap though. Vosgiennes seems to be the word on this.
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04-07-2014, 01:22 PM #6
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Thanked: 24after looking at all those nice pictures of how you brought the stone back to life I have to say I still don't know what the color is, is it gray, purple, green? I'm not the one capable of teling you what kind it is, the only thing that sprong to my mind was belgium blue but that seems verry unlikely whit those green spots, the only thing I can tell you with certainty is that it look prety to me, that's all
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04-07-2014, 02:53 PM #7
Purple or Purplish slurry is usually a dead give away that it's a BBW or Belgian Blue Whetstone. In some of the pics, it certainly does look like one.
We have assumed control !
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04-07-2014, 06:21 PM #8
Found another hone. Need help
As been already posted at B&B it seems to be a Vosges / Vosgian stone...to agree with Euclid440...
Definately no BBW (Belgian Blue or Rouge Du Salm)...███▓▒░░.RAZORLOVESTONES.░░▒▓███
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04-07-2014, 07:01 PM #9
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Thanked: 481Entirely possible that its a fine slate. I have seen similar, though I can t be certain without holding it in hand.
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05-31-2014, 04:00 AM #10
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Thanked: 169This was loaned out to someone with extensive experience with these sorts of things and it was determined to be what is typically referred to as a Vosges / Vosgian/Vosgienne stone. Here is HHT using this stone as a finisher after a vintage coticule post a slightly modified dilucot to account for the speed of my coti. It provides no feedback when honing, you must watch how the edge interacts with whatever fluid you are using, but the edges are tremendous.
Last edited by kcb5150; 05-31-2014 at 04:04 AM.