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09-15-2016, 07:50 PM #1
- Join Date
- Apr 2008
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- Saint Paul, Minnesota, United States
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- 2,944
Thanked: 433Correct pressure is so hard to teach or explain, but once your hands get calibrated it will be much less an issue.
I almost always use two hands when honing, but it's just a finger on the toe and use it more like a steering wheel or stabilizer and I rarely use any pressure
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09-15-2016, 07:56 PM #2
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10-03-2016, 05:07 PM #3
Update again! I have successfully honed 4 other razors with the same method since working with my very difficult Hart steel blade and I have come to a similar conclusion across the board. It turns out I wasn't far off from having the most wonderful shaves ever.
Yes I learned a lot from this OP question about bevel setting but that wasn't the problem it was totally revolved around torquing the blade to the edge riding the wave of water each pass that made the world of a difference. Thanks Glen!
There is a lot of stuff out there in videos and suggestions in forums but I did not find much info on folks stressing the edge torque issue. Maybe for others it comes naturally or is common sense or maybe it doesn't make much of a notable difference for them? Anyways consistent torque pressure while watching the wave of water in front of my razor told me I was hitting all pistons and the shave was song worthy! Which is what I learned here in SRP!!!
I will note that without torquing the edge down to the stone there can be a false positive that the water looks identical gliding over the edge as it should but the results will pass all the test except the comfort test. Without torquing the blades edge down to the stone the edges point will most likely get touched, sort of like it will hydroplaning no surface traction!
Again thank you everyone
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10-03-2016, 10:58 PM #4
- Join Date
- Apr 2012
- Location
- Diamond Bar, CA
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- 6,553
Thanked: 3215Without torquing the blades edge down to the stone the edges point will most likely get touched, sort of like it will hydroplaning no surface traction!
Too much pressure or not enough.
Sharpie ink on the bevel, and some magnification would tell you, if you were not honing all the way, to the edge.
Solving most honing issues is a matter of identifying problems. Looking at the edge, is always a good start.
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10-12-2016, 05:23 PM #5
- Join Date
- Sep 2016
- Location
- greece
- Posts
- 37
Thanked: 2For those they haven’t read my posts am new in honing.
My biggest problem was, I could not understand the meaning of pressure, with torqueing no problem. I made a test witch works for me and I like to shear it. I use my electronic scale. I put me stone and my razor on it, I reset the weight to zero and I start honing watching the increasing of the weight. After that I understand the lot of pressure, medium pressure, no pressure. Most important weight your razor first. Lot of pressure 3 times the weight of the razor. No pressure 50% above the nominal weight of your razor. Again this is my way of understanding the meaning of pressure.
Thanks comets are expecting, especially from the vendors.
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10-12-2016, 06:43 PM #6
- Join Date
- Jun 2007
- Location
- North Idaho Redoubt
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- 27,182
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Thanked: 13250[QUOTE=vsmirnios;1674332]I use my electronic scale. I put me stone and my razor on it, I reset the weight to zero and I start honing watching the increasing of the weight. After that I understand the lot of pressure, medium pressure, no pressure. Most important weight your razor first. Lot of pressure 3 times the weight of the razor. No pressure 50% above the nominal weight of your razor. Again this is my way of understanding the meaning of pressure./QUOTE]
This actually goes back some years in the honing forumI am pretty sure I remember somebody did a vid
It is a good idea
BUT
Here are the flaws we found with it
People try and get really light rather then getting the edge to contact
Too light a pressure is actually almost as bad as too heavy as you are not honing the edge but behind the edge
The pressure is not a constant it actually changes depending on the condition of the edge
The pressure also changes from bevel set to finish and even from the first strokes on a hone to the last in a progression
I am NOT saying it is a bad idea I am saying we tried it years ago and this is what we found lacking with it
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10-12-2016, 06:57 PM #7
- Join Date
- Sep 2016
- Location
- greece
- Posts
- 37
Thanked: 2That’s why I said minimum pressure + 50% of the weight of the razor. Is To avoid this problem. By the way were is that post still exist??
Ps. am an engineer pressure can be measured and be define.
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10-12-2016, 08:42 PM #8
- Join Date
- Dec 2012
- Location
- Egham, a little town just outside London.
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- 3,857
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- 2
Thanked: 1083Sharpie inking the bevel is invaluable to me in my honing process. A couple of laps will show me pretty much all I need to know to progress: 45°, torque, rolling x strokes needed etc to hone to the edge. Then good magnification will tell me if the bevel is set and if all stria is removed with progressive hones there on.