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Thread: Natural Stones

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  1. #1
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    That is an extremely eloquent reply.

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    Heat it and beat it Bruno's Avatar
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    I use the norton 4000/8000 because it is a fast cutter and produces a wicked edge.
    Then I finish on a coticule because it is a nice finisher and it is nigh on impossible to overhone on a coticule.
    If a manmade stone could give me the same honing experience as a coticule for half the price, I would probably use that.

    The popularity of the escher also stems from the fact that they are rare, and not made anymore.
    Don't get me wrong they are probably very good stones, but any quality vintage Thuringer stone is probably just as good, only it was produced not by escher but by someone else.
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    Senior Member nickyspaghetti's Avatar
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    To be honest I have gone off artificial stones since I left my Norton in England for 4 months. I just got it back and find it of little use. The natural stones take longer but I feel more at home using them. They just have something about them I like but can't explain.

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    BHAD cured Sticky's Avatar
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    DMT's are made from steel and nickel. But isn't diamond a natural stone? I've also heard/read that it is hard to over-hone on a DMT.

    Since the diamonds are doing all the cutting, would a DMT be considered natural, man-made, or some kind of hybrid?

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    As I understand, the diamonds in diamond hones and pastes are man-made. Both DuPont and General Electric have proprietary methods of manufacturing artificial diamonds (that aren't jewelery quality, just hard like the real thing) that are used for grinding, honing, polishing of real diamonds, carbide tools, and sometimes our razors.

    Bench hones are generally made from monocrystalline diamonds, made by G.E. which are more expensive to make, but do not break down, thus making a consistent sharpening surface.

    Lapping pastes are generally made from DuPont's polycrystalline diamonds, which do fracture into ever finer grit diamond shards as they are used, thus producing a very fast and fine polishing compound.

    So diamond hones (the majority of those readily available, that is) would be man-made. You may be able to find natural diamond dust hones, but I think manufacturers would hype the HELL out of them, and jack the prices up substantially.

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