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Thread: I hadn't really considered this
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10-07-2021, 08:52 PM #11
Laugh if you will but I have toyed with it on a lark. Bricks often have too many pocket inclusions, plus they have little chunks of aggregate, at least the couple I've tried. The trick is finding a brick you can set a bevel on. After lapping enough to hone on they were a little fine and hard for bevel set.
I am still keeping my eyes open for one that has even enough continuity and absence of pockets to actually work. I got a little distracted from that experiment which may be a fools errand anyway.Iron by iron is sharpened, And a man sharpens the face of his friend. PR 27:17
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10-08-2021, 02:23 AM #12
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- Haida Gwaii, British Columbia, Canada
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Thanked: 4826I don’t remember the last time I actually lapped one of my hones. I do clean then often when honing, like between razors, but occasionally if my 1K is getting dirty while setting a really troublesome bevel.
Also if you are honing on cinderblocks, you really need to hone with milk.It's not what you know, it's who you take fishing!
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10-08-2021, 02:35 AM #13
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10-08-2021, 12:26 PM #14
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Thanked: 3215So, if that guy only has a 1200 diamond plate, he may never have full flattened the stones originally and that hollow may have been there since new. How could he have ground away the belly of the stone, if the razor is not even touching the middle?
You probably could flatten a new stone with 1200 grit, but it would take a lot of laps. A much lower grit 3-400 or better yet a 140 plate would be more efficient.
I think many people just do one grid lapping and call it flat, when really the slurry washed off the marks and the stone was never flat. If a new pencil grid does not come completely off in 5-6 laps, the stone is not flat/smooth enough. You can still hone on it, but it could be more efficient. The swarf on his Super Stones is a typical to those stones.
But more importantly this problem is from other issues, technique as said a X stroke would hone the razor properly on that stone, and that heel needs correcting and keeping half the razor off the stone. You can easily see the pointy heel quickly becoming a hook and the massive wear on the toe where he is using more pressure trying to grind the spine.
If he corrected the heel and lapped the stone with 140 grit all these issues would go away.
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10-08-2021, 01:43 PM #15
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10-08-2021, 03:18 PM #16
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- Manotick, Ontario, Canada
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Thanked: 556I think many of the natural honing stones we use may have been quarried for use as roofing or floor tiles or even as pavers. I know Vermont Green, Vermio and others started their useful lives that way and became hones only because someone thought to try them out. We have a few rock hounds among us who are aways on the look out for a new potential hone when hiking in the wilderness.
Go for it Paul.David
“Shared sorrow is lessened, shared joy is increased”
― Spider Robinson, Callahan's Crosstime Saloon
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10-08-2021, 06:02 PM #17
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10-08-2021, 09:57 PM #18
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10-09-2021, 12:43 AM #19
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Thanked: 3224
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10-09-2021, 01:04 AM #20
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Thanked: 4826It's not what you know, it's who you take fishing!