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Thread: Todays words of wisdom on honing...

  1. #11
    Fatty Boom Boom WW243's Avatar
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    Being new at honing I just hold the razor about an inch above the arm hair, do a sweep from heel to toe and shout FAIL! Then I go back to setting bevel and using the loupe under my best reading light until I get there.
    Quote Originally Posted by Neil Miller View Post
    Sounds good, but I'm not quite sure how you would force it to fail?

    Regards,
    Neil
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  2. #12
    Senior Member blabbermouth
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    Quote Originally Posted by MikekiM View Post
    I think of it this way... (and I'll bet many new honers do the same in their exuberance to get to the more fun stones). I used to go to the back of my hand, arm or wrist and take a swipe at the hairs. I was hoping to see it clear a patch. Any patch. Fell some hairs and I would give it a positive on the AHT. That, in my mind is forcing it to pass. Getting that sort of global 'it cut some hairs' result can easily give you a false pass as well as false security that you are okay, and the bevel is set across the entire edge. Key word being ENTIRE.

    Forcing it to fail is to take a small section of the edge, maybe 1/4", and target one hair, as Jamie says. If that section cuts hair, move to another small section and a new hair and so on down the blade, in hopes that you find that section that DOESN'T cut. Your goal in forcing it to fail is identify any spots that don't easily cut a single hair. Find a spot tht doesn't cut and the blade fails the AHT.
    Well, that just sounds like an odd way of expressing it to me!

    Your 'forcing it to fail' is simply my 'seeing if its ready to progress' if it ain'r ready, it ain't ready, simple. If you don't test the entire edge as you progress from hone to hone, then you need to re-learn the basics, in my oplnion.

    Regards,
    Neil
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  3. #13
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    Try to be aware of the different feels, sounds etc when you are honing. These are clues that will help you as you progress in your learning. Not to say they are as good as tests are, but they signal when a blade is getting close. You eye being trained to recognize when the scratch patterns are uniformly covering the bevel is helpful. Although all of these require verification. The eye is part of it, the feedback, tnt, tpt, aht etc. In the beginning you are flying blind so to speak, after a while these subtle sensations become more noticed.

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    Senior Member blabbermouth
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    Forgive me Michael (mjsorkin) but that sounds like even more mumbo-jumbo.

    TPT, TNT, HHT and armhair tests are just ways to check your progress. Attaching any more meaning than that to them isn't useful.

    Call it a 'mindset' if you like, but its the kind of mindset that sees a bottle as half empty rather than half full. In other words the bottles contents are the same, no matter what your 'mindset' is.

    Same with a razor. If the bevel is not formed, for instance, its not formed. The only way to tell if it is fully formed is fully inspecting it, with one or preferably more methods. Thats sound, methodical practice, it does't need a fancier name.

    Maybe it helps people who cant hone, I cant say, but I followed the practical methods found here and elsewhere and they work perfectly well without adding fancy terms or inferring anything esoteric.

    Just my 2 cents worth...

    Regards,
    Neil
    Last edited by Neil Miller; 12-24-2013 at 02:19 PM.
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    I used Nakayamas for my house mainaman's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Neil Miller View Post
    Sounds good, but I'm not quite sure how you would force it to fail?

    Regards,
    Neil
    +1
    it either shaves arm hair or it does not.
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    Stefan

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    Quote Originally Posted by mjsorkin View Post
    You keep trying sections of the blade on small patches of hair. If you can make the blade go over a hair without cutting it then the bevel fails. If you can't then the bevel passes.

    It's more of a mindset. The test is the same each time. The passing result doesn't change. But if you start out looking for a failing result, even trying to achieve one, then you are less likely to get a false positive. A false positive always leads to frustration because you go up in grit too soon.

    Michael
    You take a swipe and if there is problem along the edge some hairs will not get cut clean, then you go back to the 1k till the blade shaves hair off evenly clean.
    Same result as if trying single hair every 1/4" or so, only it is easier to do and less messing around.
    Say you have to hone 5 razors at a sitting from bevel to strop. The "making it fail" method could take hours to complete, taking into account the time it can take to set bevel in the first place.
    I know this can be subjective but with good optics I can tell when the bevel is set and do not have to do any hair cutting to know when to move. That comes with a lot of experience though.
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    Stefan

  7. #17
    This is not my actual head. HNSB's Avatar
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    I think all that's being said is essentially: don't move on until the entire bevel is able to easily cut arm hair.
    This "mindset" is simply a means of adding emphasis to "entire" and "easily" in the sentence above.

    I don't think the intent is to try and turn it into the zen of honing or anything like that. It's just a way of explaining a passing result on an arm hair test to someone who may, in their excitement, be inclined to ignore a failing result.

    At least, that's how I understand what's being said above.
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  9. #18
    No that's not me in the picture RoyalCake's Avatar
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    Yeah I get the mindset thing. Before we set up any test at work, we (try) to set very clear criteria to evaluate the results. Like what filter can you pass the results through? What sort of averaging is allowed and can you throw out outliers?
    This is done because two different groups, based on their vested interest, can come up with quite different conclusions. I think the OP was simply stating if you try to see the glass half empty you won't let what you perceive as a pass claim victory.
    Otherwise, you'll give yourself excuses like "well I probably had it at the wrong angle" or "that hair was especially thin" etc.
    The rest of you are right in that it's probably most applicable to us novice honers.
    Data without proper evaluation criteria is sometimes worse than no test at all.

    JMO
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    At this point in time... gssixgun's Avatar
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    Everytime I say this people that have a working AHT look with disbelief

    Not everyone can pass an AHT

    In fact sitting around the table at a meet there is usually at least one that can't, same with the other tests..

    There are multiple tests for a positive bevel set make sure you have one (or more) that work every single time, that you have an absolute Pass / Fail system that works for you.

    If you are a beginner and you read "I waft the arm hair and I know my bevel is right when it cuts easily 1/2 inch above my arm" that is a great test for that person and it is THEIR absolute Pass / Fail system.. But many people could wear a razor through to the spine trying to achieve the same level of "Sharpness" (1).. There are variables involved that change from person to person much like the HHT all tests are somewhat subjective, and you are actually the subject


    That is each new honers first task to learn, they have to interpret the "Sharp Tests" to their unique situation..

    Try them all until you learn which ones work for you then tweak them so that they are infallible for you
    A 5 pack of DE blades from Walmart etc: can be an invaluable teaching tool for this...

    Remember all we can tell you is what works for us and how it works but always realize that is might not work the same way for you...



    (1) I just realized that my quotes might not be enough here so I came back to this,, The actual sharpness of the blade (Micron size) may not any different between a person wafting the hair and a person that can't pass the test.. In fact I have seen both happen with the same razor at the same table, I learned quite a bit going to the meets and teaching.. All these tests are quite subjective,
    Last edited by gssixgun; 12-24-2013 at 04:15 PM.

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  12. #20
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    Quote Originally Posted by gssixgun View Post
    Everytime I say this people that have a working AHT look with disbelief

    Not everyone can pass an AHT

    In fact sitting around the table at a meet there is usually at least one that can't, same with the other tests..

    There are multiple tests for a positive bevel set make sure you have one (or more) that work every single time, that you have an absolute Pass / Fail system that works for you.

    If you are a beginner and you read "I waft the arm hair and I know my bevel is right when it cuts easily 1/2 inch above my arm" that is a great test for that person and it is THEIR absolute Pass / Fail system.. But many people could wear a razor through to the spine trying to achieve the same level of "Sharpness" (1).. There are variables involved that change from person to person much like the HHT all tests are somewhat subjective, and you are actually the subject


    That is each new honers first task to learn, they have to interpret the "Sharp Tests" to their unique situation..

    Try them all until you learn which ones work for you then tweak them so that they are infallible for you
    A 5 pack of DE blades from Walmart etc: can be an invaluable teaching tool for this...

    Remember all we can tell you is what works for us and how it works but always realize that is might not work the same way for you...



    (1) I just realized that my quotes might not be enough here so I came back to this,, The actual sharpness of the blade (Micron size) may not any different between a person wafting the hair and a person that can't pass the test.. In fact I have seen both happen with the same razor at the same table, I learned quite a bit going to the meets and teaching.. All these tests are quite subjective,
    Any noobs should read this post several times or as many times as is necessary to fully understand it. It is spot on.

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