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  1. #1
    Junior Member
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    Default Carborundum hone.

    I picked up an old hone at the flea market.

    The Carborundum Company. Niagra Falls, New York. 118S Razor Hone. 4x2x3/4.

    It has been used very little. It is a bit dirty, it looks like some rust from bits razor that stuck to the stone during honing. Anything special I should do to it before using it? Any good way to clean it?

    I'm inclined to treat it like a waterstone. Wash it off and store it under water. I've never had an actual barber's razor hone before, so I am unsure how to treat it. Thanks for any insight.

  2. #2
    Natty Boh dave5225's Avatar
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    Try cleaning it with dish soap . You may want to soak the hone in water to soften up the crud on it , but the hone does not need to be soaked before use . I believe Lynn has demonstrated how to use a barber hone in one of his instructional videos .
    Greetings , from Dundalk , Maryland . The place where normal people , fear to go .

  3. #3
    Senior Member leadduck's Avatar
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    Are you sure it's a razor hone? In a post from this past June, Utopian pointed out that Carborundums usually say on the box if they are in fact, for razors. Here's an excerpt from his post:

    "I'm working on a compendium index for all the Carborundums that I have found. I hope to post it soon. The only impediment is taking all the damn pictures for it. In the mean time, here is a list of all Carbos that I know of that are in fact razor hones.

    45
    79
    101
    101a
    102
    103
    104
    105
    106
    118s
    152
    160? (based on a photo provided by an SRP member and we couldn't properly make out the number)
    200
    201"

  4. #4
    Junior Member
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    Yup. I'd would say it is a razor hone. The orange box it was in has all the words I wrote above about it. 118S Razor Hone.

  5. #5
    illegitimum non carborundum Utopian's Avatar
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    You are right. The 118S is a razor hone. It is softer than the low 100 grit hones and it seems to have a slightly more coarse grit, but it works just fine and maintains a perfectly useable edge.

  6. #6
    Ultimate Laid-Back Hero
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    I picked up a Carbo #200 that was so dirty I thought it was a double-sided hone, and after a few minutes on 1200 grit wet/dry (on the flat kitchen counter) it was clean as whistle.

    From what I've read here, they don't require lapping, and from experience I can say that it's so hard that high-grit sandpaper won't harm it, so if it were me, I'd run it over sand paper or a green kitchne pad. That should do it.

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