Has anyone ever cut down a 3" Norton to say 2" or 1 1/2" etc.? What did you find to be the best way to go abouts it?
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Has anyone ever cut down a 3" Norton to say 2" or 1 1/2" etc.? What did you find to be the best way to go abouts it?
They used to make Norton 4K/8K stones in a 2 inch wide model but I can't seem to find them anymore. It seems like they have been discontinued; however, I have seen them in the for sale section on occasion. If you wanted to cut the stone I would imagine that you would have to use a diamond coated blade because the Norton would dull your normal blade very fast. I am not sure how you would keep the stone from chipping.
The chipping (as in blowing up) is where I'm concerned. I've had the pleasure of having a few grinding wheels blow up in my face over the years by being stupid and taking the easy way out. This would be the opposite approach, metal to the sander. A diamond wheel would do it for sure, but I'm not sure if that's the only option. :shrug: What would be trick is those high pressure water cutters.
Yeah I think they still make the 2 1/2" Norton's. I've seen them around (or maybe it's the 2", my memory gets worse as I get older). I was thinking about cutting one [3"] down to 1 1/2" so I would basically have two hones out of one. Maybe make one 2" and the other 1" for when a real narrow hone comes in handy? I've got a bunch of 1", 1 1/2", and 2" natural hones and a few barber hones. I said it in another post but I really like working with the smaller widths with razors.
Use a metal cutting bandsaw blade. They work just fine.
Has anyone tried a wetsaw for ceramic tile? I bought one of these for my remodeling project, and I'm curious as to whether it would work for hones. :)
Josh
One of our members, Kelly, cut his Norton, and I remember he had difficulties doing it...
Nenad
Thanks for the tip Randy. I was thinking maybe a band saw as the width of the blade would take less off than say a circular saw. My neighbor has a really nice Grizzly that he told me I can use any time I want, but I have to get my own blades. I think this would be a good candidate for getting my own blade. :roflmao
Read all about it here:
http://straightrazorpalace.com/showt...ghlight=norton
Nenad
A tile saw with a diamond blade and continuous water bath should cut a Norton easily. If these saws can cut ceramic or porcelain tile, concrete pavers, and real stone tile (which they can), slicing a Norton should be effortless for that type of machine. After all, the novaculite and coticule hones are cut with this type of saw. Norton may also use them to bring their stones to finished dimension. You may be able to cut them with a bandsaw, but I suspect the blade will be scrap before you're done and then you have all that abrasive dust to clean out of the machine (and your nose).
good luck, Bruce
Point well taken. Superfly (in that link) speaks of saving your time/money and going to a stone cutter. I would bet if you walked up with one of these and ask them to cut it for you, all you would have to do is give the guy a tip for the effort. It would take maybe 5 minutes with the right setup.
I have cut up several barber hones, some pieces of a broken norton and a bunch of coticules with a bandsaw blade. Yes, the stones do wear them out fast but to cut just one Norton you would only need 1 blade. About $8 and takes maybe 3 minutes.
Randy, If you say it's that fast I'm there. The blade on a ban saw would be the thinest and would keep the meat on the stone. I'm also thinking the wider blade of a circular saw would make for a little more unstable environment needing a little more patience and more room for error. A stone cutting wheel would be the way to go but it too is wider and you would need the setup to do it, for me I would have to take this to someone and have them do it for me.
I'm wondering what the best blade would be to do it on a ban saw both for precision and cost effective?
I haven't tried it, but I suspect a simple hacksaw would work pretty well if the stone is drenched with water.
Nortons are fairly soft. Especially the 1K and 4K sides.
I was thinking about doing the same exact thing. Cut that sucker in half down the middle. In fact, I was thinking of taking it over to the business that just moved in behind my back yard. Its a monument (grave stone) maker. I'm sure it would be an easy and quick task and I doubt they would even consider charging me.
If I decide to do it, I'll post my results.
I use a flat bed wet diamond wheel tile cutter for cutting my hones. Works a treat. This has cut Arkansas, Norton, Coticule, Thuringen and the H.......... stone I got off TM. Can never remember the dam name of that hone. The cut is about 2-3 mm (less than an 1/8" ) so the wastage is low and the cut is perfect true and smooth.
PuFF
i believe the word you are looking for is Hunsrueck
I just used a El Cheapo metal cutting blade from a home improvement store. Nothing special.
Use a diamond blade for cutting Nortons or other whetstones. I have a lapidary saw that is used wet and I get good clean cuts with it. I also have a diamond blade for my RotoZip and I use that as well but it's used dry. I've cut granite and marble with it as well with no problem. Be absolutely sure to use a good dust mask and safety glasses when you do this! You risk silicosis by breathing in whetstone dust and that ain't pretty. BTW, I don't use those white paper masks as I don't think they do the job very well and my lungs are one of my favorite organs. I use a full lexan face mask with two dust filters. They cost about $100 and Grainger carries them. I use a full face mask because I've had stuff go in my eyes past safety glasses and a plastic face shield. Stuff bounces up under the shield and gets around the safety glasses. After having that happen several times I spoke with an Industrial Safety Expert who works for a major industrial firm and he told me to stop fooling around with cheap masks and goggles. I took his advice and haven't regretted it. I know some folks just use safety goggles but I happen to like the rest of my face as well!