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12-07-2015, 05:25 PM #1
- Join Date
- Dec 2015
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- Netherlands
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- 27
Thanked: 4Beginner question: what hone to get?
Right, I wasnt sure where to post this one, but since this section is about honing equipment, I thought why not ^-^
So I have a 400/800 grit and a 2000/5000 grit sharpening stone for honing my knifes. I read somewhere that a 5000 grit stone is the minimal fineness needed for sharpening a razor. My question now is do I need a special hone for my razor or is the 5000 grit side of my stone enough?
Also if I need a different stone for honing my razor, which one would be the easiest to find (i.e. at an online shop) and is the most budget friendly?
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12-07-2015, 05:27 PM #2
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- Dec 2014
- Location
- sheffield
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- 554
Thanked: 55You could probably get by with a 10,000 grit naniwa superstone. What brand is your 5,000? Lots of info in the library.
"Ignorance is preferable to error, and he is less remote from the truth who believes nothing than he who believes what is wrong."-Thomas Jefferson (Notes on Virginia, 1782)
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12-07-2015, 05:30 PM #3
Personally I'd say get the Norton 4/8. It will put a shaveable edge on the razor with minimal effort. When I started I went through so many cheap options until I accepted that there was no cheap option. I could have bought the Norton 5 times by the time I learned the lesson!
In my opinion the Norton offers real value for money, it's user friendly and most of all it works
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12-07-2015, 05:54 PM #4
^ this.
Sure you can scrape by with cheap options, but you'll have to replace them in the long run.
I would also advise getting a proven method well documented in use for razors. This will make any questions you have much easier to answer. Many will suggest a synthetic route.. I don't see why not.
There is no right or wrong way to shave ready. Only time, trial and error, a few painful shaves and persistence. At the end of the day if it comfortably takes hair off your face you did it right and it doesn't matter what stone got you there. I wish you luck..
My vote. A synthetic 8-10k.
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12-07-2015, 06:06 PM #5
technonine, are confident enough in your current shaving skills, i.e.: beard pattern growth, well built lather and a currently pro honed razor to want to attempt honing a razor. Knife honing is to razor honing as apples are to pineapples. A whole dark pit of so many variables that you could fall into and possibly ruin a good razor. There is a reason we stress learning the basic shaving skills to the point of being automatic to your day before trying to hone your own. Many members might say that it is one in a couple of hundred that can master razor honing right off.
"The sharpening stones from time to time provide officers with gasoline."
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12-07-2015, 06:38 PM #6
If your just starting out with razor maintenance. Have some high quality chromium oxide pasted on either a balsa plank or fabric strop of some kind and either get a naniwa 10 or 12k hone for touch ups. You can maintain a straight razor shave ready just with those 2 things. Later you can add coarser stones 8k and 4 or 5k and be able to restore most edges to functionality with those. Depends how much you want to get into it after that.
Don't drink and shave!
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The Following User Says Thank You to Razorfaust For This Useful Post:
outback (12-07-2015)
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12-07-2015, 07:02 PM #7
You really should check the library here.
Razorfaust and the others are right on.
But you must(very important) lapp your stones (make them flat) and champfer the edges (bevel),
especially the hones you use for your knifesMike
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The Following User Says Thank You to outback For This Useful Post:
Hirlau (12-07-2015)
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12-07-2015, 07:03 PM #8
- Join Date
- Dec 2014
- Location
- Virginia, USA
- Posts
- 2,224
Thanked: 481My suggestion if you have a shave ready razor that's just starting to need a touch up: get a barber's hone. Long as there are no nicks, dings etc. That need a higher grit, a few swipes (5-10) on one of those will have you ready to shave again as fast as, if not faster than, any other hone you can get. Once you have that, you can expand your hone collection to finer or coarser grits as needed. In retrospect, I wish I had gone that route myself. Well, you live, you learn.
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12-07-2015, 07:39 PM #9
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- Dec 2015
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- Netherlands
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- 27
Thanked: 4
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12-07-2015, 08:42 PM #10