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Thread: Hone of the Day

  1. #1721
    www.edge-dynamics.com JOB15's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by outback View Post
    Wheatsheaf Cutlery Co.
    Fresh from the work bench, one layer tape.
    Bevel set: 1000 Chosera.
    Small Washita and oil.
    Large Washita and water.
    Slurried Coti, diluted to water.
    Slurried B/G Escher, diluted to water.

    Strops:
    Leaded linen.
    Russian Tanned/ heavy draw.
    Red Latigo/ med. heavy draw.
    Russian Tanned/ med. draw.
    Bridle/ light draw.
    Roo/ fast, very light draw

    Passing all test, but the one coming next. SOTD [emoji6]
    Wow , you have a strop progression
    What's "Leaded Linen"?

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  3. #1722
    Senior Member blabbermouth outback's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by JOB15 View Post
    Wow , you have a strop progression
    What's "Leaded Linen"?
    A fire hose type strop, rubbed with lead.

    Just like using Cr/ox, but a whole lot less aggressive. Polishes and smooths out the edge. IMO

    I heard about it, and don't use that part of the strop anyhow, and the original paste had washed out of it when I cleaned it up for restoration. So it was a perfect candidate to try it on.
    I like it...but only use it as the first strop in the progression for newly honed blades. When one starts to shave poorly, I try 100 passes on the med. draw Russian, then the leaded linen if that doesn't work. If that fails..Cr/ox pasted strop, but I've yet had to resort to anything but leather...so far. [emoji56]
    Last edited by outback; 07-02-2017 at 10:15 PM.
    Mike

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    Senior Member blabbermouth tcrideshd's Avatar
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    You go Mike that lead is a great medium. Tom sent me a chunk and I've been using it on my daily strop routine,, I like the effect . Smooth. Tc
    “ I,m getting the impression that everyone thinks I have TIME to fix their bikes”

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    Senior Member blabbermouth outback's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by tcrideshd View Post
    You go Mike that lead is a great medium. Tom sent me a chunk and I've been using it on my daily strop routine,, I like the effect . Smooth. Tc
    Yep, keen like a Escher/ Thurigan, but smooth like a coti. [emoji6]

  8. #1725
    Senior Member xiaotuzi's Avatar
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    I honed a Greaves & Sons that I just finished cleaning up. I thought I'd have a little fun and use my largest and smallest hones. After setting the bevel on a King 1k, I went to a Shapton 2000 then on to these... I used the brick-colored side on the big Norton followed by the black side with a drop of dish soap. This thing works quickly and gives a great edge, extremely sharp so I like to tone it down a little with a coticule after the black side. For this I used my smallest coti but one of my favs. The Norton is something like 12 x 4 inches and the little coti is almost 6 x 1 1/8 or so. I like handheld honing so the Norton sits halfway up my forearm while the coti fits right in the palm. It was a good exercise and the resulting edge was right in that sweet spot combining sharp with comfortable.
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    Last edited by xiaotuzi; 07-03-2017 at 01:34 AM.
    "Go easy"

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    Senior Member blabbermouth tcrideshd's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by outback View Post
    Yep, keen like a Escher/ Thurigan, but smooth like a coti. [emoji6]

    You know that's a very accurate description,, I wish I had thought of that! But it's true, I don't hone, I only touch upon a regular schedule, you know 5-10 laps on a Nani 12kevery 12 shaves but since my razors are going on the lead I've been going more like 20 shaves easy. So just like paste but I feel it still keeps that buttery smooth edge going a long time. Tc
    sharptonn and outback like this.
    “ I,m getting the impression that everyone thinks I have TIME to fix their bikes”

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    Senior Member Steve56's Avatar
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    Re-finished a Hamada frameback for a friend of mine in France. It was already shave-ready, we're just swapping edges so I used a tomo and a nice karasu razor hone that does smooth really well. The frame is soft so I used 1 mil DuPont Kapton to protect the frame without increasing the angle much and also because it is what he used to hone it. Finished up with a few dry strokes on the fine polishing uchigumori, some palm stropping, the 20/50 on the Kanoyama. Silent HHT root in or out.

    Cheers, Steve
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  13. #1728
    Senior Member blabbermouth Steel's Avatar
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    Default A case for tape

    Well I'm down to honing around three razors a week. Today's hone job is a Joseph Smith & Sons on a full Arkansas progression. The bevel was set on a Washita stone. I went with a layer of tape since there was a visible chip to be honed out. Then the blade was taken through the rest of the progression- soft, hard, surgical black. And then what I did next was interesting. I took off the layer of tape, inked the bevel with permanent marker and did 10 x strokes on the surgical black Arkansas to see how far from the edge I would be without it. Ink still there. 10 more xstrokes. Most of it's gone. 10 more X strokes and the ink was all gone scratches all the way to the edge. I spared the blade all the hone wear at the same time within 30 extra strokes on the finishing stone I get away from any kind of future need of tape for touch ups etc. BEST OF BOTH WORLDS.

    Stropped and shaved and this razor is one of my top edges. A BBS shave in two effortless passes. God I love my Arkansas stones. I haven't used anything else in roughly two straight years!
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    What a curse be a dull razor; what a prideful comfort a sharp one

  14. #1729
    The Hurdy Gurdy Man thebigspendur's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by tcrideshd View Post
    You go Mike that lead is a great medium. Tom sent me a chunk and I've been using it on my daily strop routine,, I like the effect . Smooth. Tc
    Real lead?

    Are you concerned about the stropping motion causing lead to come off and ingesting it?
    No matter how many men you kill you can't kill your successor-Emperor Nero

  15. #1730
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    Lead is pretty damn dangerous to mess with. Plenty of boys in my hood have come down with a sudden case of lead poisoning !
    outback likes this.

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