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  1. #1
    50 year str. shaver mrsell63's Avatar
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    Thumbs up A Barber Hone in your progression?

    A barber hone is not necessarily just for the occassional edge touch-up.

    I have found that a barber hone fits well in certain honing progressions. I am constantly experimenting. Lately I have found that when I sharpen a blade to basically shave ready through the 8k, I then do 6 laps on a Swaty, then 15 to 20 on a Salm Coti, then 20 to 25 on a Nakayama Maruichi, then 60 plain leather strop. Shaves are quite close and smooth.

    Any barber hone followed by higher grit naturals should yield a better edge than just a touch-up on a barber hone alone. My theory is that using a barber hone in your finish progression adds a higher level of sharpness, especially a hone such as an aggressive Frictionite 00 for example, certainly does add too much sharpness if you do more than about 5 laps.

    The idea is to take your 8k edge and add just enough sharpness so that the subsequent natural stones tame that sharpness while adding a comfortable level of smoothness.

    With the Swaty/Salm Coti/Nakayama combo, I am experiencing just the right amount of sharp/smooth to get a great shave.

    I am getting one-pass stubbleless shaves on a regular basis and am enjoying these shaves on a daily basis.

    Give it a try if you like..............

    JERRY
    _____

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  3. #2
    Senior Member RogueRazor's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by mrsell63 View Post
    A barber hone is not necessarily just for the occassional edge touch-up.

    I have found that a barber hone fits well in certain honing progressions. I am constantly experimenting. Lately I have found that when I sharpen a blade to basically shave ready through the 8k, I then do 6 laps on a Swaty, then 15 to 20 on a Salm Coti, then 20 to 25 on a Nakayama Maruichi, then 60 plain leather strop. Shaves are quite close and smooth.

    Any barber hone followed by higher grit naturals should yield a better edge than just a touch-up on a barber hone alone. My theory is that using a barber hone in your finish progression adds a higher level of sharpness, especially a hone such as an aggressive Frictionite 00 for example, certainly does add too much sharpness if you do more than about 5 laps.

    The idea is to take your 8k edge and add just enough sharpness so that the subsequent natural stones tame that sharpness while adding a comfortable level of smoothness.

    With the Swaty/Salm Coti/Nakayama combo, I am experiencing just the right amount of sharp/smooth to get a great shave.

    I am getting one-pass stubbleless shaves on a regular basis and am enjoying these shaves on a daily basis.

    Give it a try if you like..............

    JERRY
    _____

    I just did this myself. I read a post about stainless steel blades liking synthetics more than naturals and I had loaned my norton 4/8 out so all I had was my Swaty hone. I've read that the coarse side is about 6k and the fine side about 8 k so I used them as such. I started on a BBW as a 3 k start then did 10 laps on the 6k side and 20 on the 8k side( a bit high but it was an experiment) THen, finished on a naniwa 12 k and the edge was the best this Flaschner 5/8 has had.

    I like using it better than my 4/8 that's for sure

  4. #3
    Senior Member Wintchase's Avatar
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    I have a couple hones... It just seems that they are slower than regular stones, so i only use them for travel now.

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