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08-25-2014, 02:47 PM #1
For me where a blade has enough wear that you are honing into the stabilizer I would correct the heel to remove some of the stabilizer and reveal the blade again letting me hone all the way to the heel without hitting the stabilizer. OZ did a thread on it but cant remember the name of it.
My wife calls me.........Can you just use Ed
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08-25-2014, 04:06 PM #2
- Join Date
- Apr 2012
- Location
- Diamond Bar, CA
- Posts
- 6,553
Thanked: 3215You should be able to put the razor on the hone in any position and have the spine and bevel completely touching the hone.
You can hone it with the stabilizer off the hone and not grind it, but you run the risk of hitting the stabilizer and messing up your edge. It makes it hard to do circles.
Lower the stabilizer as described.
You also should hone with the heel about a half inch forward of the toe and use a rolling x stroke to reach the toe and heel.
If you use the 90 degree straight stroke you run the risk of honing a frown, missing the heel and toe and causing a heel spur. I shave with all the edge, using the heel and toe all the time.
A large part of honing is identifying problems and figuring out how to resolve them, because 100 year old razors are never straight and without defects. When your blade was new and full width, the stabilizer probably cleared the stone.