Will do. Hopefully I'll be able to report back Monday if I can finish lapping it by then; 48 hours could be pushing it!
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heres some advice on how to prep a hard or translucent/surgical black. i lap them with a 325 dmt(use water) after that i use a 3x1 translucent pocket stone to rub down the stone to smooth it over(first dry then with oil ) for the last step i use a steel block(or a knife ) and rub the stone until there is swarf all over the stone(use oil) i repete this three times to get the broken in feel after this process the stone should have a smooth reflective surface and will deliver the best results thats with in your stone ability. i just finished a 10x3x1 surgical black ark
I would love to get my greedy little fingers on an 8" surgical ark. All I ever come across are 6 or less. I recently picked up a small one on the bay that I THOUGHT was a translucent that was saturated with oil and grime. Turned out, the stone is both black AND white! I had never seen that before. Stupid HAD, Stupid RAD, Stupid empty wallet! :angel:
Oh, and back to the original posting..... (duh!)
I have a knife sharpening kit from the same company that I have owned since it was new (1978?), and the included hard ark stone is exactly like yours, only smaller (sigh) I would guess that the stones they mined from where ever they were digging, were all like that with the grey/blue tone instead of true black. But they work very well indeed. :beer1:
Well I took my worn out dmt to it and thank goodness it was barely used as only a few minutes of work ensured me it was flat and smooth enough to use as a finisher. I took a Torrey to it and it felt very much like glass with almost no perceptible tugging of the stone on the razor. Beautiful results, too. I like this stone very much.
just finished my first razor on my ark. it put a very nice edge on my razor all in all a great shave. 200 strokes on the stone 25 on the linen and 200 on leather.
My grandmother was the owner of Indian Mountain Whetstones and Arkansas Abrasives. Neither companies were owned by Norton. We would be more than happy to answer any questions.
How's that for a reply?Quote:
My grandmother was the owner of Indian Mountain Whetstones and Arkansas Abrasives. Neither companies were owned by Norton. We would be more than happy to answer any questions.
There is some individual variation to the true hard-surgical black-translucent stones, such that each stone I've got is a little different from the next. In your cell phone pic, the stone looks more gray than black, and there are translucent stones of several different colors that exist.