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Thread: Can anyone explain the reason behind the X strokes?

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    Member Carlospppena's Avatar
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    Default Can anyone explain the reason behind the X strokes?

    Can anyone explain the reason for the X strokes? They all make sense in a 5 x 2 barber hone, where the toes of the edge is outside the surface for the beginning of the stroke and the heel of the the edge its outside the stone at the end of the stroke. BUT, in a regular 8 x 3 stone it appears to the unexperienced that the toe gets 80% more "atention" than the heel.

    If you have a full size hone, What is the benefit of the X stroke?

    Thanks to all for your responses.
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    Senior Member blabbermouth Geezer's Avatar
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    Good question! I await answers also. It works for me especially with smiling blades.
    ~Richard

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    Member Carlospppena's Avatar
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    Right on Geezer. Im not questioning wether it works or not. It definitely do. I just want to know the reason...
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    Senior Member rodb's Avatar
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    Almost every blade has at least a slight smile so if you don't do an x-stroke you will do the center of the blade more than the heel and toe

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    Member Carlospppena's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by rodb View Post
    Almost every blade has at least a slight smile so if you don't do an x-stroke you will do the center of the blade more than the heel and toe
    dear rodb, with respect... your response make me ask myself: what came first the hen or the egg? In other words, i think that the reason that most blades have a slight smile is the X stroke.

    I am a newbie, nevertheless, the first thing i did to all the razors that i have bought is put the edge against a flat glass to verify that it is straight. Dovo, Boker, TI, Aust, Kanetaka, Stark, all of them were straight when they came in.

    In the other hand, i bought two filarmonicas -definitely counterfeit, probably from Pakistan, jeje- to practice honing. Those had a slight smile on them. I mean, I am new to all this, there is a learning curve, and I thought stupid if I put a new expensive razor in a hone without knowing anything about that. So, I found the counterfeits in a barber supply store for $25 each. They were a good investment. Now i have been able to refresh my Aust, Dovo and Kanetaka to a pretty good shave. Those were a good instructional investment. But that is a different subject...

    What do you think, rodb?

  8. #6
    The First Cut is the Deepest! Magpie's Avatar
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    Straights have changed markedly over the decades You will be hard pressed to find a Sheffield blade from before 1880 that WONT have a "smile" and yes, they were made that way

    later razors that were actually the straight straight edges, there didnt seem to be as much need for an x stroke, but the reality is, most people did not have a 3in wide stone. hell, most people did not have a stone.
    As for "why does it work" I'm pretty sure its because when steel comes in contact with an abrasive, metal is removed, and done properly can result in an edge being produced
    I'm not even going to start on the bent razor problems

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    Senior Member blabbermouth tcrideshd's Avatar
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    geometry issues alone create a need to use an x stroke, to make sure all of the edge gets hones on every stroke, plus 3" stones are not all that common in the past, ie. thuringians and a lot of coticules, check them out a lot of 1 1/2 -2'" stones, just as mentioned, smiling blades need this to reach all of the edge, and just because your edge is a straight one , if the spine has geometry issues it causes the same affect.

    plus your overthinking it, it works and has for a few hundred years I have one straight blade that has a warp in it, the edge really only gets honed as it approaches the edge of the stone on the x stroke, other wise on that side it would only hone the toe and heal, on the other side just the middle of the blade
    “ I,m getting the impression that everyone thinks I have TIME to fix their bikes”

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    Know thyself holli4pirating's Avatar
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    I do an X stroke on any blade I hone. As I move the razor along the X, I keep the "emphasis" on the part of the blade near the edge of the hone. This way, if there are any inconsistencies on the blade, I deal with them automatically (the exception being the concave side of a warped blade). I've also never had a problem with blades wearing unevenly.

    So for me, it's a bit of a Pascal's wager: I've developed a technique that works on (almost) any blade and have never noticed or thought of any downsides.
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    Senior Member AlienEdge's Avatar
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    I believe the X stroke was a common sense move for the small barber hone. Circles are as well for honing on a barber hone, because of the size of the hone. From reading the old instructions that accompanied the old barber hones the X stroke was the finishing stroke to align the minute teeth.
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    On most razors not everything is completely straight and true in all three dimensions. X-strokes compensate for that

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