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  1. #1
    . Otto's Avatar
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    Buy the Norton 4000/8000.
    Learn how to use it.
    Then you decide if you want to buy more.


    "Cheap Tools Is Misplaced Economy. Always buy the best and highest grade of razors, hones and strops. Then you are prepared to do the best work."
    - Napoleon LeBlanc, 1895

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    Disburden (01-18-2011)

  3. #2
    I Bleed Slurry Disburden's Avatar
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    As mentioned buy the norton 4/8 and learn it, it is the best to learn on imo. Make sure you lap it well.

    You can easily shave off the 8K if it's done correctly and you can set a bevel on the 4K side if you need to, it just takes some extra time. Raising a slurry on the 4K side helps speed up the bevel setting a long with circle strokes.
    Last edited by Disburden; 01-18-2011 at 12:17 PM.

  4. #3
    At this point in time... gssixgun's Avatar
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    That Norton combo set is a great Cornerstone set, honestly it really can hone any razor that is worth honing...

    You have a very good plan in mind...

    IIRC
    SRD still has the best US price on these sets too...

  5. #4
    Senior Member raneyday's Avatar
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    Thanks for the input, everyone. I thought about just getting the 4k/8k, but by the time you buy the flattening stone, I can add another $20 and get the 220/1000. Seems logical to me.

    Also, I'm getting the felt strop either way to maintain my edges, so having it as a finishing step is a nice dual purpose. I like the "cornerstone" comment. If I want to try something different in the future, adding a finishing stone will be a relatively small cost. If I decide I don't want to do this at all (unlikely) I can move the whole set on eBay for a small loss.

    Glen, based on my research you are correct about SRD's pricing of the set. Thanks for the validation of the plan.

    Here we go...

  6. #5
    Senior Member raneyday's Avatar
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    I just spent as much money on a finishing strop setup and "beginner" hones as I did on my initial razor/strop/brush purchase, and I didn't exactly go cheap on those. "This hobby can save you money", yeah...right.

    But I'm looking forward to hours hunched over a workbench in a cold/hot garage getting frustrated while trying to patiently polish an edge on a razor. Isn't amazing what we consider "fun"?

    --David

  7. #6
    is in ur bas3 killin ur d00ds. SonOf1337's Avatar
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    Absolutely, dude. What would possess a man to think that it is profitable and ingenious to put a sharp knife across his throat. Or why would he spend countless hours trying to make that knife so sharp that it could fillet an air molecule with the slightest touch. And further, why would that man waste the same money that could purchase a month's worth of top-notch disposable razors to get some rusty old relic that some dusty old fart once used to carve away at his own face that an equally dusty old granny found stuck in the bottom of his dingy underwear drawer and decided to hock at a less-than-reputable pawn shop across the street from a brutal pimp's favorite corner?

    We do it because we like it.

  8. #7
    Senior Member raneyday's Avatar
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    HA! Well said, sir.

    Well, except for the dingy underwear drawer part.

    --David

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