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  1. #1
    Senior Member AusTexShaver's Avatar
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    Default Pre honing ritual

    I would like to find out what others are doing to the razor (if anything) before honing. Is it productive to strop it first or is this a waste of time? So far my prep has been to just make sure the razor is squeaky clean, give it around 30 laps on the leather (unless it's a bevel reset and then I skip the strop) and then just start honing.

    Is there anything else I should be doing?

  2. #2
    Senior Member blabbermouth ChrisL's Avatar
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    Can you explain your reasoning as to why you strop before honing?

    Chris L
    "Blues fallin' down like hail." Robert Johnson
    "Aw, Pretty Boy, can't you show me nuthin but surrender?" Patti Smith

  3. #3
    Senior Member AusTexShaver's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Chris L View Post
    Can you explain your reasoning as to why you strop before honing?

    Chris L

    Running a razor across my chin is very similar to running it over a wire brush.

    Unless the razor is so dull it would benefit from resetting the bevel I feel a stropping lines up the blade so when I hit my finishing stone for a quick touchup I'm not causing micronicks by grinding off bentover parts of the blade. Maybe I'm just being paranoid.

  4. #4
    Senior Member AusTexShaver's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by AusTexShaver View Post
    Running a razor across my chin is very similar to running it over a wire brush.

    Unless the razor is so dull it would benefit from resetting the bevel I feel a stropping lines up the blade so when I hit my finishing stone for a quick touchup I'm not causing micronicks by grinding off bentover parts of the blade. Maybe I'm just being paranoid.

    Perhaps I should have clarified this a little. I've gotten spoiled since I've finally figured out how to hone so it's not uncommon for me to quit using a razor that's not doing the job in the middle of a shave. I've already filled my quota of bad shaves.

  5. #5
    Senior Member blabbermouth ChrisL's Avatar
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    Have you tried stropping the razors that stop performing for you in mid shave? If so, has that improved things? I share a similar beard with you as do many others here. If my razors aren't extremely keen, edges that remove whiskers with ease on my cheeks and neck can actually get stopped by my chin whiskers and require a different approach (short micro passes, different and alternating directional approaches, etc). IME, edges that crap out mid shave are either under or overhoned. At this stage in my honing, they're almost always underhoned. They don't pass the shave test. They're not ready.

    Interesting theory on strop aligning an edge before bringing it back to a polishing stone for refreshing. Can you experiment with this and go to the hone without stropping, test shave and tell us if you feel any measurable difference?


    Chris L
    "Blues fallin' down like hail." Robert Johnson
    "Aw, Pretty Boy, can't you show me nuthin but surrender?" Patti Smith

  6. #6
    Senior Member AusTexShaver's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Chris L View Post
    Have you tried stropping the razors that stop performing for you in mid shave? If so, has that improved things? I share a similar beard with you as do many others here. If my razors aren't extremely keen, edges that remove whiskers with ease on my cheeks and neck can actually get stopped by my chin whiskers and require a different approach (short micro passes, different and alternating directional approaches, etc). IME, edges that crap out mid shave are either under or overhoned. At this stage in my honing, they're almost always underhoned. They don't pass the shave test. They're not ready.

    Interesting theory on strop aligning an edge before bringing it back to a polishing stone for refreshing. Can you experiment with this and go to the hone without stropping, test shave and tell us if you feel any measurable difference?


    Chris L

    With a well used razor it's not uncommon for me to strop 3 times during a shave. If stropping doesn't improve the shave I switch razors.

    I have already done that test and it seems to take less honing for a touchup if you strop first. Since I got my Shapton 16k I've experimented a lot!

    My standard of exellence is will the razor comfortably shave my chin so now I strop, hone and test. Before I used to start on the 8k but now I give the 16k a try first and it normally passes on the first or second test. If it doesn't pass on the second try I do a 4/8 pyramid then go back to the 16k.

  7. #7
    The Razor Whisperer Philadelph's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by AusTexShaver View Post
    ]I've gotten spoiled since I've finally figured out how to hone so it's not uncommon for me to quit using a razor that's not doing the job in the middle of a shave. I've already filled my quota of bad shaves.
    Ok, let me chime in and say that you stating what is above combined with everything else here has me wondering- How long have you been shaving and how many razors do you use?? It sounds like not veeeery long. If that is the case (and even if it's not) and you are using three razors during a shave because you think the first two need touchups (but you only honed them days/weeks ago) then something is wrong and it ain't your razors so to speak. Maybe you need to revisit your honing technique? Once I hone a razor well (usually the first time), I don't need a touchup for months and months using a bunch of different razors in rotation.

  8. #8
    Senior Member AusTexShaver's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Philadelph View Post
    Ok, let me chime in and say that you stating what is above combined with everything else here has me wondering- How long have you been shaving and how many razors do you use?? It sounds like not veeeery long. If that is the case (and even if it's not) and you are using three razors during a shave because you think the first two need touchups (but you only honed them days/weeks ago) then something is wrong and it ain't your razors so to speak. Maybe you need to revisit your honing technique? Once I hone a razor well (usually the first time), I don't need a touchup for months and months using a bunch of different razors in rotation.

    Excuse me for not having a large enough collection and soft enough beard that I can pass one on to my grandchildren before it needs sharpening.
    Last edited by AusTexShaver; 09-25-2008 at 04:59 PM.

  9. #9
    Qui tacet consentit bpave777's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Philadelph View Post
    Ok, let me chime in and say that you stating what is above combined with everything else here has me wondering- How long have you been shaving and how many razors do you use?? It sounds like not veeeery long. If that is the case (and even if it's not) and you are using three razors during a shave because you think the first two need touchups (but you only honed them days/weeks ago) then something is wrong and it ain't your razors so to speak. Maybe you need to revisit your honing technique? Once I hone a razor well (usually the first time), I don't need a touchup for months and months using a bunch of different razors in rotation.
    Sorry Tex, but I gotta agree with Alex here. I'm not trying to give you a hard time. Glad to have ya, but how about a bit of an idea of what tools you're working with? You should be able to go through quite a duration between hones with proper stropping. Pretty much regardless of the razor wire beard you're shaving through. Where your tools play a part in this is: I want to know what kind of steel you're working with.

  10. #10
    Senior Member blabbermouth JimmyHAD's Avatar
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    I look at the edge under magnification before I hit the hone. The condition of the edge determines the grit I start with. IOW, if there are chips or a burr I might start with 2K rather then 4. As far as stropping, in this thread mparker 762 said;

    "I once took a Wostenholm wedge and sliced through cardboard until it was too dull to shave armhair even with pressure. It took a bit more than a thousand laps on linen before it would shave as well as it did before. That sounds like a lot, but it was only about 45 minutes of stropping - my right arm wasn't working right for a few days after though.

    I don't think the leather really does much sharpening. I've tried to get moderately dull razors sharp by stropping on leather with only minor improvement after hundreds of laps. But the linen on the other hand can make dramatic improvements in the edge".

    mparker762 again in this thread;

    "I've been doing a lot of experimenting with stropping lately and one thing I've noticed is that I have been drastically understropping my razors these past years. If I only did 10-15 laps on the linen and 30 or so on the leather then my edges would last about ten days. But if I did 40-50 on the linen and 30 or so on leather then the edges didn't really deteriorate at all over several months (Stainless razors need far fewer laps on the linen to keep a great shaving edge). So I've suspected for awhile that for me at least corrosion was the big edge-killer, and these photos demonstrate that this is certainly plausible. I've also noticed that my linen was turning black after a few months of this, which led me to believe that the material coming off the blade was the black oxidation. I think these photos have also convinced me that a mild abrasive on the daily strop may not be an inherently flawed idea, especially if you happen to live in an area with tap water that causes more rapid corrosion than is depicted in these photo or skin chemistry that causes the same problem. If the purpose of the strop is to abrade away the corrosion, then a little help can't hurt, the trick is to not overdo the stropping in this case".

    I haven't tried stropping before honing but now I do the 50 linen and 30 leather before shaving and it is working well for me .
    Be careful how you treat people on your way up, you may meet them again on your way back down.

  11. The Following User Says Thank You to JimmyHAD For This Useful Post:

    timberrr59 (09-25-2008)

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