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Thread: Do I really need a lap stone?
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06-27-2009, 01:40 AM #21
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Thanked: 402Looking good!
The sandpaper will wear out fast, but if you do the gross jobs on the sandblaster stuff it will work.
No idea on the gunky pipe. Better not probably.
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06-27-2009, 01:58 AM #22
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06-27-2009, 01:59 AM #23
Sweet. If I can tolerate it, can I use the 120 for all the hones, or am I better off getting a finer grit sandblaster (ie the 120 will just eat valuable rock)?
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06-27-2009, 02:21 AM #24
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Thanked: 171What other hones are you lapping? I've found that the 120 is really better for heavy duty lapping. I saw you were looking at a thuringian and norton (assuming 4k/8k?). For the norton, I would lap them the first time on the 120 sandblaster, and then subsequent laps on ~600 grit w/d. For the thuringian, unless it's in pretty rough shape, head straight to the 400 w/d, then the 600 w/d (IME, they are soft and lap fast). If it's in rough shape, get it mostly there with the sandblaster, then head to the 600. The idea with the sandblaster is just to get you to an initial flatness and then you should never need it on the same hone again. Once the stone you're working with is flat with the sandblaster, move on up the grits.
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The Following User Says Thank You to pjrage For This Useful Post:
khaos (06-27-2009)
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06-27-2009, 02:40 AM #25
I think by the time "subsequent laps" comes around I'll have a D8C. I have not yet decided between the Norton set and the Henckels set, but I guess thats much of a muchness. The Thuringen I'm getting from Kees is in new condition (its vintage though) and he is send it lapped. Good to know that I should only use high grits for it. How high should I go in the grit rating? stop at 600? Or should I smooth out on 800 or even 1k?
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06-27-2009, 11:57 AM #26
I don't think you need to break in the plate for lapping.
Your hones will do that quite readily.
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07-04-2009, 11:04 PM #27
OK, I have a DMT8C as a lapping stone and my question might be silly, but here goes:
Does the DMT8C as a lapping stone needs to be lapped too? By what grit? A Wet and dry 80 grit sandpaper? Or is the DMT8C so tough that will ALWAYS remain perfectly flat? Does lapping a lapping stone makes sense? I told you it would be a silly question...
ThanksLast edited by Leon; 07-04-2009 at 11:17 PM.
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07-05-2009, 09:25 PM #28
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Thanked: 156Surprised no one answered your question yet.
The answer is no. If you have a diamond plate, its good until the diamonds wear out. If you have something like the norton lapping stone, you have to lap that with a diamond stone or something similar. Or sandpaper.