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01-31-2023, 03:46 AM #1
Definitely all possibilities, the angles on my chin are sharp, and the hair grows in a very inconvenient direction, and is coarser, and I probably use the wrong angle there, and I do it last. My recent shave after using the pasted strop was clearly sharper throughout the entire shave, and I did my chin sooner than usual, 2nd region of my face instead of last (maybe 8th region in sequence.)
I do seriously doubt that 80 strops is actually helpful. I've been looking at metal under scanning electron microscope frequently lately, not edges but extremely magnified view, the tiniest touches to the metal are clearly visible after 30x, super visible as you get more magnified, I have a hard time believing that you would need to spend that much time on a strop to realign an edge with how easy it seems to be to adjust metal on the very small scale. The technique is certainly important, but the quantity I doubt.
I might buy one of these just to have it. I don't like how my loupe has to be super close to the subject to see it well.
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02-01-2023, 12:45 AM #2
You're not just aligning the edge. You are also removing burrs, polishing and reshaping to a finer degree. But to be clear, use light passes and more laps instead of the opposite. I know some people will tell you to bear down on the strop. My experience tells me to do it the other way. But don't take my word for it. Try it and see. Bravery and experimentation is how we learn. For me it is hold the strop taught but not banjo skin tight. Hold the razor loosely in my hand and control with the thumb and forefinger. Do x stroke laps for 20-80 depending on what condition the razor is in (more and more different materials if I have just honed)
Read some posts in the stropping forum and see what people there say then use your mental seive to sort out what works for you.Iron by iron is sharpened, And a man sharpens the face of his friend. PR 27:17
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02-02-2023, 06:12 PM #3
I guess discussion about how much effort I strop with is not at all productive if we have no standard for what "light" means.
I don't put a ton of pressure on the razor as I strop by any means. Initially, when I was having major trouble cutting any hair with my razor, I would use literally zero pressure, the bare minimum to actually cause the edge to contact the leather, and have gravity only as the source of force. My knife guy watched me doing that and immediately told me that I will not get anywhere with this.
I tried putting the razor on a scale to get an idea of how much force I use, it's not 100% but it looks like about half a pound or so. I don't consider this a lot of pressure at all, maybe it is "heavy pressure" or "light pressure" depending on who you ask. I get much better results this way.
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02-03-2023, 02:32 AM #4
As the saying goes, "the proof is in the pudding." As you have rightly pointed out the measurements and their scale is rather subjective and hard to quantify. In the final analysis what others say is only relevant to the extent that you can use it to your benefit. I try to use these two dicta as a guide. "We can learn from anyone including a fool," and "Even the brilliant have moments of idiocy."
Iron by iron is sharpened, And a man sharpens the face of his friend. PR 27:17