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Thread: About to buy a Belgian Blue Whetstone

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  1. #1
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    Default About to buy a Belgian Blue Whetstone

    So this will be my first honing experience with a straight razor. Mine is getting realllllly dull, even after stropping. I was told this could be used as one of those "all in one" honing stones. I can use this to pretty much get my blade back in shape, for the life of the stone. Just want to make sure I don't need to get other stones or anything, I'm trying to just get one and get away with it. If this doesn't look like a good idea, LET ME KNOW

    Buying the:

    BBW (Belgian Blue Whetstone) 6 x 1.4" (150 x 40mm)
    w/ Free Shipping (USA/Canada ONLY)
    $39 In-Stock

  2. #2
    At this point in time... gssixgun's Avatar
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    Calling a BBW an all in one stone is a pretty far strech of the imagination...

    Can it be done yes, but it would not be even in my list of top 10 stones to try this with...

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    Then what stone would you try this with? I just don't want a collection of stones, or a large price tag.

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    At this point in time... gssixgun's Avatar
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    Glen's Buy One Stone and Done List

    Norton 4/8
    Naniwa 3/8
    Henckels 3/8
    Coticule w/slurry stone
    Thuringen w/ slurry stone

    Below this line your pushing the price or the performance

    Hard J-Nat with nagura(s)
    Escher w slurry stone
    Barber's Hone
    PHIG w/slurry stone
    Spyderco UF w/Diamond grit powder or a nagura
    King/Cerax/Bester 1/6
    BBW w/ Coticule and BBW slurry stone
    TOS

    And even many of those I listed are not really great choices either

    ps: Any natural stone listed above is subject to not working at all for you they are after all natural and yours is not going to be the same as mine..
    Last edited by gssixgun; 12-23-2011 at 11:35 PM.

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    If I were to buy 2 hones, would it be cheaper? And what hones would I get?

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    You would just have to see if the retailer offers package deals. Many do, but it's usually for a full range of a single brand of hones. That would not be cheaper.
    The combination hones that Glen mentioned consist of two hones in one block. Norton 4/8 is 4000 on one side and 8000 on the other. That is two stones in one, and it's a lot cheaper than getting the separate 4000 and 8000 stones.
    I'd get a combination stone. If you want a little something extra get some CrOx or .5 or higher diamond paste to make a pasted strop for occasionally refreshing an edge that doesn't quite need an actual honing yet.

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    I Bleed Slurry Disburden's Avatar
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    For starters I would buy the Norton 4/8K. ITs very easy to learn how to hone on and they all work the same so everyone's results can be comparable when it comes to asking for help on the honing.

    Coticules are expensive unless you buy a small size for a pocket hone, which works fine for hand honing but you may want a bigger stone for more work eventually. Some people like the smaller coticules and use them only, but others don't like the small size. Even a 6"x2" coticule (Which is the smallest I'D buy myself) is about 150USD.

    You can hone from bevel set to finish on a coticule alone BUT it takes a lot of practice to learn this and you may end up frustrated after several months of practice. I learned how to hone this way myself but it took me several months to get the sharpness right for me to be satisfied on the shaving results. I know a lot of coticule guys may think I am not being truthful or honest about my experiences but I am just being honest, that method was tough for me to learn and the Belgian Blue was even harder to get a good result from. All those natural stones work differently and my stone may not be the same speed, etc, as yours so explaining how to help you is less effective. You will need to learn those on your own with YOUR stones.

    Barber's hones are on Ebay all the time, they are synethic man made pocket hones that are no longer made. They sell for 20-50$ on ebay. They are all you need to keep a razor shaving sharp, with stropping, for pretty much ever. The only downside is if you need to reset a bevel or damaged a razor, then you will need more hones to set the bevel and resharpen. A barber's hone is a touch up hone it will not be effective for full honing. I think these should be the first hones anyone buys unless you want to hone a full start-finish.
    JimmyHAD and jeness like this.

  8. The Following User Says Thank You to Disburden For This Useful Post:

    JimmyHAD (12-24-2011)

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