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  1. #1
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    Default Looking for a touch-up hone

    I've read the wiki. I've searched the forums. I haven't been able to make any progress towards making a decision about what hone to get.

    Purpose: touch up only
    Options (I think): Barbers, Coticule, Nakayama

    I want a good stone that will give me superlative results. I'll leave the bevel setting to the pros. I just want to touch up.

    Why are Nakayamas worth the $$$?
    Why are Barbers hones so cheap?
    Why do the honemeisters not use Barbers stones?

    Please help.

  2. #2
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    From my own experience and research, having very recently purchased and used my own set of hones, there are a couple of reasons older members do not advise barber hones. First and foremost, it is quite difficult to establish what kind of stone you are actually getting from most online vendors. Most of them don't know what kind of grit rating the stone is, or even what company makes them - simply tagging the item barber hone. Thus, you're basically spending money with hit or miss tactics that you get a stone that is suitable for use with your razor at all. I was personally looking into barber hones, but after the idea got slammed by a few people I went with more trusted options.

    I'm sure there are some other members that can give you some more advice, but I would stay away from barber hones. I'm planning to touch up my own razor on my chinese 12k after about a week to see how it does. If you currently own a set of hones, using your highest grit rating or a comparable stone (you'll have to check with other members on that) might be the way to go for touch ups. You might also go the route of a treated strop, although I have personally never done so.
    Last edited by GUESSKOENIG; 08-08-2009 at 07:10 AM.

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  4. #3
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    Quote Originally Posted by GUESSKOENIG View Post
    From my own experience and research, having very recently purchased and used my own set of hones, there are a couple of reasons older members do not advise barber hones. First and foremost, it is quite difficult to establish what kind of stone you are actually getting from most online vendors. Most of them don't know what kind of grit rating the stone is, or even what company makes them - simply tagging the item barber hone. Thus, you're basically spending money with hit or miss tactics that you get a stone that is suitable for use with your razor at all. I was personally looking into barber hones, but after the idea got slammed by a few people I went with more trusted options.

    I'm sure there are some other members that can give you some more advice, but I would stay away from barber hones. I'm planning to touch up my own razor on my chinese 12k after about a week to see how it does. If you currently own a set of hones, using your highest grit rating or a comparable stone (you'll have to check with other members on that) might be the way to go for touch ups. You might also go the route of a treated strop, although I have personally never done so.
    So barber's is out.
    I do not wish to go the treated strop route.
    I do not have a set of hones myself.

    I'm leaning towards nakayama, but have a feeling that would be overkill.

  5. #4
    Senior Member blabbermouth JimR's Avatar
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    Huh? I know several "older members" (Nun2Sharp, Lynn Abrams...ahem...) who sometimes use and recommend barber's hones. They're cheap, and if you get a known one like a Swaty they're pretty reliable. As long as you make sure you see pictures and it's not falling apart, it should do you well. And of course, you can always get direct advice by posting a pic of the hone you're considering.

    They're cheap (sometimes) because they are common as dirt, and the market is pretty limited to, well, us. Check the classifieds, and you'll probably see at least one a week come up.

    Seeing as how a Nakayama is an entire order of magnitude more expensive than a barber hone, you might want to think about it. I mean, if you've got the scratch there's no reason NOT to go for it, but it's not necessary.

    If your only requirement is that the hone be high enough grit to touch up, you've got tons of options--Coticule, 12K naniwa, 16K-30K Shapton, Chinese Waterhone, barberhone, etc. etc. If there are other factors that weight in, like size, cost, aesthetic, natural or synthetic, and so on, then you have something to narrow down your options.

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  7. #5
    Professional Pedantic Pontificator
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    A BIG +1 on Jim's comments about barber hones.

    The reason they are cheap is because they are so useful, that when straight shaving was the only way, practically everybody had one, so there are millions of them floating around out there.

    I have a relatively full set of shapton glass hones, including the 16k, and I have chosen to keep my barber hone because they are so ideally suited to touch-ups.

    5 laps on a barber hone will refresh an edge. I just pull it out of the bathroom cupboard, slap some lather on it from my brush, make 5 passes, a few laps on the strop, and it's right back to shaving.

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  9. #6
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    I'm an extreme beginner, but I really like my NOS Thuringian from Kees. Full-sized 8" x 3" for only $100.

  10. #7
    illegitimum non carborundum Utopian's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by GUESSKOENIG View Post
    From my own experience and research, having very recently purchased and used my own set of hones, there are a couple of reasons older members do not advise barber hones. First and foremost, it is quite difficult to establish what kind of stone you are actually getting from most online vendors. Most of them don't know what kind of grit rating the stone is, or even what company makes them - simply tagging the item barber hone. Thus, you're basically spending money with hit or miss tactics that you get a stone that is suitable for use with your razor at all. I was personally looking into barber hones, but after the idea got slammed by a few people I went with more trusted options.

    I'm sure there are some other members that can give you some more advice, but I would stay away from barber hones. I'm planning to touch up my own razor on my chinese 12k after about a week to see how it does. If you currently own a set of hones, using your highest grit rating or a comparable stone (you'll have to check with other members on that) might be the way to go for touch ups. You might also go the route of a treated strop, although I have personally never done so.
    I respectfully, but almost completely, disagree with everything you wrote. First, do you have ANY experience with barber hones? "First and foremost," I don't know of any online vendor of a barber hone. There might be some, but if they don't provide a grit rating, there's a valid reason for that and I'll get to it later. I don't know of any modern day barber hone being made. Swaty made over 5 million barber hones and there were probably many times that of Swaty clones made. So many were made because they worked, and worked well, for over a hundred years. No, most people don't know the grit of their barber hones. Anyone who knows anything about barber hones knows that grit size of a barber hone is irrelevant. That in no way means that barber hones don't work. Yes, some few barber hones don't work well, but I wouldn't exactly call their acquisition a "hit or miss tactic." If you buy a barber hone and you don't like it, you're out maybe 20 bucks. Odds are good that the next barber hone will work well and for $40 you've got the only hone you will ever need and you can put the first one up on ebay and probably recoup most of what you paid for it.

    By the way, about your "Chinese 12k" that you bought, you don't know the grit rating on that either. I guarantee that it's not 12k. It's a misnomer to identify a natural stone as having a particular grit. Also, no properly honed razor should need a touch up after only a week.

    Finally, personally, I DO advise the use of barber hones. I'm fully aware that some people don't like them but if you start with a properly honed razor, you can maintain that razor for many years with nothing but that $20 barber hone. If you plan on honing many razors, then no, a barber hone is not practical, but if you intend to just maintain a few of your own razors, there is no need to invest a lot of money in hones when that single barber hone can provide you with a perfectly serviceable set of razors for the rest of your and your son's and your grandson's lives.

    For anyone who is interested in a barber hone, there are some of us in this forum who can advise you on any particular barber hone you find for sale in the classifieds or on ebay. Help is available if you want it.

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  12. #8
    Senior Member sebell's Avatar
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    If I were purchasing one stone to do touchups, I would
    try to stay with a consistent stone that isn't too fine --
    the Shapton 30k and Nakayama may not be the best
    choice (and then you've got the price)...

    - Scott

  13. #9
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    I would say barber hones is the best option for touch ups. Think about it you don't need to more then 2-4 strokes? which hone will replace this? There is none. have fun

  14. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by Utopian View Post
    Also, no properly honed razor should need a touch up after only a week.
    Brilliant post otherwise, but I am not entirely certain I subscribe to the above statement. My full hollows certainly do after 5-7 shaves.

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