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Thread: Another help with hone ID please

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    Senior Member Vasilis's Avatar
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    Chances are, it's not a Thuringian. All we know is, it's dark, and a slate. Also, it has some different coloration that is not characteristic of a Thuringian, that's a fact.
    Earth has plenty of slates to offer, a lot of these quarries have some homogeneous material that can be used as a hone.
    Schwedenstein (it just might be one but interesting patterns in slate is nothing unique) stones aren't Thuringians, it's different area and a different quarry, same case with the mottled type of stones that are rarer than true Thuringians, but aren't the original Thuringians either, not that they are inferior in any way.
    Schwedenstein stones have good cutting power, and Thuringians don't, that's a big difference. The ones I tested were finer than the classic Thuringians too, but that's not a fact as there are softer ones that are coarser and not of finishing grade, I hope to get one of these next year.
    Also, any slate can have good cutting speed with or without slurry, or it can be slow. It's the nature of the material, not an indicator. Slurry color isn't an indicator either.
    I seriously doubt it's a Thuringian unless proven otherwise. All we know is, it's a fine, probably, dark slate. The market is full of sellers with stones marketed as Thuringians, and in most cases they aren't. Someone assuming that a stone is a Thuringian doesn't make the stone a Thuringian. And proving that one is, that's a real challenge.
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    Thanks Vasilis, your response makes a lot of sense.
    I knew it would be hard to identify just by colour and as a novice I am not really much help.
    Regards Denise

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    Senior Member Iceni's Avatar
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    I'm not seeing what you guys are seeing.

    The picture of the underside of the rock. I see small flakes. And a rough finish.



    This image is showing me a very smooth finish. It also has some inclusions that look very familiar to me.



    And finally your man says he struggled to raise this amount of slurry on 2K wet and dry. That tells me it's as hard as Satans toenails.




    I would guess it's a Novaculite. One of the odd Vintage ones that crop up from time to time. I have one that was equally hard to identify.





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    Iceni, thanks for your input.
    Ihave had this for quite a few years. I bought this hone at a Garage Sale along with the hone I asked about last week.
    http://straightrazorpalace.com/hones...id-please.html

    Oh and Iceni, your comment: "And finally your man says he struggled" ..... "And finally your WOman says She struggled"
    Thanks momma aka Denise
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    Senior Member Iceni's Avatar
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    Dives for cover for fear of flying rocks!

    Sorry about that!

    The other stone does indeed look like a Noviculite as well. There are no hard and fast rules for what one should look like, And they come in coarseness grades as well! There are loads of colour variations some look layered and banded. Others have spots or are all one nice colour! Some are translucent, other totally black or grey.

    They work out the grade by measuring the density of the stone. The most dense stones are the finishing grades. The least dense have more airspace and pores and cut more aggressively and faster.

    You can google specific gravity equations if you are wanting to go that route. Then compare it to the gravity formula used by Dans whetstone.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Specific_gravity

    https://www.danswhetstone.com/inform...ne-grades-101/
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    Iceni, No flying rocks shall be thrown at you
    Hmmm the Gravity Equations, now how hard could that be
    What I need is a hone expert that lives in Yarrawonga VIC Australia -
    Once again, thank you for taking the time & trouble to help me

    and thank you too Vasilis. You have put in a lot of effort to explain things and it is appreciated
    Last edited by momma; 02-19-2017 at 12:57 PM.

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    Senior Member Vasilis's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by momma View Post
    Thanks Vasilis, your response makes a lot of sense.
    I knew it would be hard to identify just by colour and as a novice I am not really much help.
    Regards Denise
    Needless to say, I meant no offense. If the stone is a fine one you can shave comfortably with, that's all you need, the name is irrelevant.
    Also, the back side with the natural appearance look different than a way a Thuringian or Schwedenstein is split but characteristic of a slate, but enough about that.
    Something else I observed, but I'm not sure if it applies only for some quarries or it's a general rule of thumb; if there are no inclusions and sparkly particles on a uniform, homogeneous stone, the darker its color, the finer the stone and you stone is dark indeed.
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    This was my light colored Schwedenstein, I sold it and it's one of the two stones I regret selling, 22.5x5.5+x3cm piece and really really fine, a few western ones could beat that edge,
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    Here is the Thuringian I have, note the way the back side looks, all Thuringians with one or more surfaces that are left with the natural appearance have some strange lines, the weren't split easily, it's more like you are trying to break a piece without veins and what you get is this natural appearance. That yellowish wide line is just natural color on the surface and can be lapped off with sandpaper and a tiny effort.
    I'll send you a PM with a link to a friend's, Peter's, collection, there are Thuringians and Schwedenstein and you can see their characteristics
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