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Thread: Need a bit of slate advice

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    STF
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    I'm not sure if I want more stones yet but here is the link if anyone else is interested, obviously they would be a bit cheaper in USD

    https://www.ebay.ca/itm/174299368207...wAAOxyuPtQ~E5U
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    I don't use my purple or the 8-10k much, if you want I can give you a good price on the pair. Just shoot me a PM if interested. Little bit smaller at 5 x 1.5", slurry stones included. Maybe you'll enjoy them, like I said the purple is good, I personally can't get on with the black but some people like it so to each their own.

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    Last edited by thp001; 05-26-2021 at 06:39 PM.
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    Senior Member blabbermouth
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    Years ago, when they first came out and were cheap, I bought several, They are no-where near the advertised grits and can vary in performance from stone to stone.

    They are mid range stones at best not advertised grit rating. Good for tools.

    Natural stones can not be grit rated.
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    Senior Member blabbermouth RezDog's Avatar
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    I had a borrowed purple one. It worked like a charm. So I bought one and sent back the loaner. Mine has little to no cut. Very very slow hone.
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    At this point in time... gssixgun's Avatar
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    Slate,

    There are quite a few running around right now, most people are NOT disclosing the sources, I have found a few out

    Most are Paving and Decorative stone cast off.. People add fancy names and high grit ratings and we have new "Stones"

    All of them have started off cheap and as soon as the "FanBoy" talk kicks into high gear the pattern develops

    The grit rating increases
    The price increases
    The hype increases

    IME slate is all about the slurry feel, test that and you usually can figure out if the chunk-o- rock is a finisher
    If the slurry feels silky and has no grittiness you might have a winner..

    Personally I like the people that are straight up front and honest that say "Hey I cut up a pool table slate" try it out (Been testing that for a month or so with good results and reviews from customers)




    JMHO here

    ps: Yes I got a set of the Welsh slates on this side of the pond, I think I paid $50ish for all three

    The one that was called Dragon Tongue sucked
    The Purple one was pretty good
    The one that was compared to a Thuri was pretty good very silky feeling

    (I never used them for a customer's razor they didn't pass that threshold)

    None of them matched my Thuri as a finisher and I sold them for what I paid
    Last edited by gssixgun; 05-27-2021 at 03:24 PM.
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    I have the set in both 6- and 8-inch lengths. I liked the two higher-grit stones enough to get the longer versions. Glen's right about the "Dragon's Tongue," it sucks at any length and isn't worth the carbon footprint to mail it from the UK. Both the purples are good but slow, and one of the highest grit ones was vastly better than the other. But still slow, and not Thuri-quality.

    I got these stones early in my honing learning process and have since found much better (and faster) ways to get where I need to go. I think the only one of these I've even touched in the last 5 years is one of the purples.
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    The Hurdy Gurdy Man thebigspendur's Avatar
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    Now IF you can find an old school with real slate blackboards, those were usually very fine grained stuff and would make a good honing stone. The trick is finding an old school undergoing renovations or being demolished or has been abandoned.
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    Senior Member doorsch's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by gssixgun View Post
    Slate,

    There are quite a few running around right now, most people are NOT disclosing the sources, I have found a few out

    Most are Paving and Decorative stone cast off.. People add fancy names and high grit ratings and we have new "Stones"

    All of them have started off cheap and as soon as the "FanBoy" talk kicks into high gear the pattern develops

    The grit rating increases
    The price increases
    The hype increases

    IME slate is all about the slurry feel, test that and you usually can figure out if the chunk-o- rock is a finisher
    If the slurry feels silky and has no grittiness you might have a winner..

    Personally I like the people that are straight up front and honest that say "Hey I cut up a pool table slate" try it out (Been testing that for a month or so with good results and reviews from customers)




    JMHO here

    ps: Yes I got a set of the Welsh slates on this side of the pond, I think I paid $50ish for all three

    The one that was called Dragon Tongue sucked
    The Purple one was pretty good
    The one that was compared to a Thuri was pretty good very silky feeling

    (I never used them for a customer's razor they didn't pass that threshold)

    None of them matched my Thuri as a finisher and I sold them for what I paid
    Here comes the funny thing, sounds like youre giving us some new advice in concerns of „slate and paving stones“ well you actually do not Glenn. Not one slate beeing quarried in the past has been quarried on its own or „only“ for the purpose of honing. Well probably some one men show business but i cant recall any right now...

    The honing stone business was always and ever a side business of the quarrying operation...easy to explain because you would never made enough money with that business for sharpening stones or razor hones on their own. So if there is no need to say „iam cutting pool table slate“ because everybody knows that the origin must have been in most cases an already existing quarrying operation. Besides of some rock hounds trying to find smaller spots of „local“ Material...most likely i rarely got material which was fine enough.

    I had them all The Müllers Water Grindstone, The MST Slate, The Dragons Tongue and some others. I still prefer my vintage Thuringians today, something i can fully agre with youre statement, hard to come by these stones...
    ███▓▒░░.RAZORLOVESTONES.░░▒▓███

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    Senior Member blabbermouth
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    Much like the Japanese stones, that were curried at the mouth of the mine and the “Decider” had to choose which stones were worth more and easier to sell to the hordes of carpenters, and worth carrying down the mountain literally on the backs of workers and loaded on to wooden backpack racks.

    The smaller, finer stones were pitched over the side with the slag. Today folks are picking through that rubble and selling them on eBay as razor stones.

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