View Poll Results: Do you hone your own razors?
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Results 101 to 110 of 110
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10-14-2013, 07:26 PM #101
I do hone my own razors, purely because I don't trust our postal system with razors, and I can't afford (too impatient) to pay someone else to do it for me.
~ Dave ~ ... back to lurking...
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10-14-2013, 08:59 PM #102
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10-14-2013, 09:05 PM #103
As I've mentioned before, baby steps for me.
First learn how to shave.
Now, I've learned about white / grey paste on the linen side of the strop, have a CroX balsa board, and a coti to refresh my razors. So far, made it as far as strop and balsa board. Going to a workshop next week to learn how to refresh blades using the coti, and when I'm proficient in that. I'll think about whether the next step is what I want to do - hone my own.
It's the journey for me, not the destination, and I'll take the path that presents itself to me when the time comes....in the meantime, it's all about the fun!
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10-14-2013, 10:16 PM #104
I have hones and enjoy sharpening my knives, but for some reason I dread doing my razors. Probably because it's a lot easier to screw up a razor blade.
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10-14-2013, 10:27 PM #105
I like honing and prefer it over sanding on a blade or pinning any day!
I have a Norton 220/1k, a Norton 4k/8k and a Franz Swaty hone for final honing and touch up.My son is a Drill Instructor in the United States Marine Corps at Parris Island, SC
Mike
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10-15-2013, 02:21 AM #106
- Join Date
- Jan 2012
- Location
- Talent, Oregon, United States
- Posts
- 184
Thanked: 15For me not honing my razors,that would be like not honing my pocket knife.Grandad would stand up in his grave if he found out I was not at least doing my own blades.
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10-16-2013, 05:16 AM #107
- Join Date
- Nov 2006
- Location
- Greenacres, FL
- Posts
- 3,079
Thanked: 603I've been investing some of my bountiful and totally unscheduled free time (really, all my time) and working on my honing... one blade at-a-time. Tonight's was a Union Cutlery "Spike", a 9/16 wedge, that I'd bread-knifed a few years back. Now, let me say this about the Dia-Sharp DMT series of 3x8 diamond plated hones. They're great for lapping synthetic water-stones -- I use the DMT-C (coarse) plate to lap my Norton 8K and 4K stones, and borrowed a fella's DMT-XC to (mostly) lap a 3x8 Spyderco UF; I also use the DMT-F (fine) and DMT-EF (extra-fine) to reset the bevel. But from then on, my razors only touch the synthetic water stones I've just mentioned.
Tonight's Union Cutlery "Spike" began on the DMT-C for bevel setting; once it would cut my arm hairs along the length of the blade, I moved to the DMT-F to "dial-in" the bevel -- with both bevel-setting setups I added a drop of dishwashing liquid to the diamond plate's surface, and made sure to keep it wet, not simply moist. Meanwhile, both Norton stones -- 4K and 8K -- had been soaking in a container of tap water for 30 minutes. When the timer rang, I first drew a pencil grid on the Norton 4K, then lapped it briefly (figure-eights) on the DMT-C; when it was finished, I repeated the procedure with the Norton 8K. With the bevel correctly set and then refined on the DMT-EF, I went to work with the Norton water-stones to further sharpen/polish the razor. I didn't use a pyramid progression; rather, multiple groups of 25 round-trips on the well-wetted Norton 4k -- followed by the same procedure on the Norton 8K. When that was done, I moved over to my 3x8 Spyderco UF (which I'd previously lapped on a Dia-Sharp DMT-XC) and, yet again, followed procedure and wet them well, then groups of 25 laps with the Union Cutlery "Spike". I finished the session with 15 laps on a hard felted-wool strip (3x12) which had been sprayed with 0.5-micron diamond solution, then 15 more on another hard felted-wool strip that had been coated with Chromium Dioxide powder, and finally 50 laps on a 3/8" thick 3x12 piece of stropping leather. I will be wiser, in the morning.
PS: Slept late (see signature), and even before drinking my first mug 'o coffee I had a wonderful shave with this razor -- the stiffness of the grind gives me the control that, combined with the sharpness of the blade, enabled me to employ classic, two-handed shaving technique. The result? a worry-free, BBS shave!Last edited by JBHoren; 10-16-2013 at 05:34 PM. Reason: Update
You can have everything, and still not have enough.
I'd give it all up, for just a little more.
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10-16-2013, 10:47 AM #108
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10-16-2013, 11:19 AM #109
If you have time and enjoy these honing sessions, then respect - not my business.
I have done this in the early days, took me years and some mentoring to get first class edges.
These days that would be a session so I don't do it.
For me
1) Bevel set Chosera 10k + Coti (sometimese water only on coti if set is really good) = job done.
2) sometimes as above except finish on jnat.
I do occassionally finish on nani 12k on stubborn steel (stainless on occassion it depends).
I have no problem touching up on crox if feeling lazy but still a good edge not as smooth though IMO.
Thats it much more streamlined these days.
Joe
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01-09-2014, 07:01 PM #110
I enjoy honing just not setting a bevel on a eBay special. I have way to many to pay someone to do it. Also I can get an edge the way I like it . People that hone don't have time to do a complete shave to test an edge. I does take a while before it clicks. I found the 1 k bevel setter to be the big factor in success.