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04-23-2023, 11:45 PM #1
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04-24-2023, 12:10 AM #2
Gee. It's nice to help others, but 5 pages of this has yielded nada, IMO.
Some don't listen to advise given. It's a pursuit for some to ask and then argue......... Silly.
Seems time to move on?
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04-24-2023, 01:27 AM #3
Here's an itemized list of the adjustments I've made within the last 2 months:
- In person lessons from the most skilled honer I could find in my city.
- Multiple attempts on my own to hone my razor using his exact technique to the best of my ability.
- Chamfered the stones when I learned that they aren't supposed to be perfect rectangles.
- Found new techniques to flatten stones upon discovery that my previous method is very flawed.
- Ordered a group of cheap razors to practice on to avoid unnecessary wear on my nicer Dovo.
- Spent 3-4 hours on the hone practicing.
- Read through the entire ScienceofSharp website, as well as a bunch of other literature.
- Attempted to follow his instructions step for step.
- Purchased a new Loupe so that I can get a closer and clearer look at the edge of my razor.
- Refined my stropping technique with in-person help from my local honer, as well as watching videos and practicing.
- Added the pasted strop to my honing progression.
- Significantly more practice using a straight razor to shave.
- A bunch of time and effort trying to figure out what I'm doing wrong by talking to people here and listening.
- Asked for specific recommendations for guides that skilled honers think I *should* follow, after explaining that I have no ability to parse them for quality myself.
- Learned how to feel for a burr as small as would be present on a straight razor.
- Learned how to shine light on the edge of the razor to try to identify areas where the edge doesn't meet.
And then tomorrow I plan on:
- Taking high quality photographs at different angles of the razor.
- Measuring the spine with calipers at various points.
- Calculating the angles of the razor.
- Learning a new technique from Edge Dynamics videos.
That's just the last two months or so. I'm mad at the razor, not the instructions I've been given. I haven't blamed anyone's instructions for my failure to get an edge on this razor. I have every right to be frustrated with this thing too considering how much I spent on it, how much effort I've put into it, and how little I've gotten out of it. This razor cost me over $200 Canadian, and I also spent $40 getting it professionally honed by two different people, and another $250 on stones, and so far over the 4 years I've owned it, I've gotten 2 decent shaves out of it.
I'm going to have a stroke if one more person suggests I "don't listen to advice given".Last edited by rickytimothy; 04-24-2023 at 01:36 AM.
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04-24-2023, 01:55 AM #4
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04-24-2023, 02:10 AM #5
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04-24-2023, 02:12 AM #6
Put that bad boy aside and come back to it after you have more experience under your belt. That's the nice thing about having a gaggle of them.
Iron by iron is sharpened, And a man sharpens the face of his friend. PR 27:17
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04-24-2023, 02:20 AM #7
I'm more than happy to do that
, I'm quite sure that the differing expectations of the Gold Dollars will make the frustration sting less. It hits differently when you know how much the Dovo cost + the fact that I should never have had to sharpen it this much in the first place.
By the way I am a gambling man, and if someone sends me an intentionally dull razor but that has good geometry, I would be happy to bet you the cost of the razor and shipping that I can get a good edge on something with normal geometry. I'll throw in $10 on top of razor and shipping if I can't.