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10-14-2008, 02:21 AM #1
Sharpening Pond ideas please.....
Does anyone use any type of container to make a sharpening pond for the stones used during honing and if so, what do you use? I'm looking for something other than the Shapton pond. It's pricey.
I alternate from holding my stones when honing to using a stone holder with the stone flat on a table. To date, I've always laid a small towel under the stone holder to catch water when I wash off the stone surface.
It would have to be a very shallow container, ideally shorter than the height of a stone in the stone holder. It would be nice to have a water containment setup so I could move my honing upstairs rather then in "razorville" as my wife calls my area of the basement I disappear to far too often. With a pond, I could sit at the table and be in the same room with my wife as she watches TV. I don't watch TV, so it would be a compromise you see.
Thanks.
Chris L"Blues fallin' down like hail." Robert Johnson
"Aw, Pretty Boy, can't you show me nuthin but surrender?" Patti Smith
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10-14-2008, 02:27 AM #2
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Thanked: 271There's the Veritas stone pond that they talk about in this thread.
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10-14-2008, 02:43 AM #3
You could you use a bus tub -- you know, the grey things they use at restaurants to bus tables / clear dirty dishes, and make a crosspiece (or two) to hold the stone or stone holder. Come to think of it, you could just use a 2x4 (maybe even one of those plasticky ones they make for decks, the name of which completely eludes me right now), and just cut some slots so it would nest onto the tub when laying across it. The bus tubs are like $5 at restaurant supply stores.
But that's taller than you were thinking of (I think they're about 8"). Another thought is a half-sheet pan (still thinking restaurant supply store, obviously), which is an aluminum pan with about 1' sides that you use in the oven for cookies and such. I know, i know, metal. You could lay some of that drawer liner stuff along the bottom and sides (the stuff you use, for example, in chest toolboxes to keep tools from sliding around). That would protect the blades from mishap and keep your stones from sliding as well. In that same ouvre, you could also use a cafeteria tray.
Sorry about the lack of clarity. I'm distracted by my need to yell at the TV (Giants game).
Cheers,
cass
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10-14-2008, 02:48 AM #4
Thanks Cass. Out of everything you've mentioned, I like the idea of a cafeteria tray. A manageable size, small lip and plastic. I think I'm going to try this. Thanks!
Chris L"Blues fallin' down like hail." Robert Johnson
"Aw, Pretty Boy, can't you show me nuthin but surrender?" Patti Smith
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10-14-2008, 02:58 AM #5
I started out using a metal tray meant for water colors available at art supply stores or on the web here. At that time I honed with the tray in my lap. Since then I have moved to doing it standing at the kitchen sink. I find I have a more consistent stroke standing then I do sitting.
Be careful how you treat people on your way up, you may meet them again on your way back down.
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The Following User Says Thank You to JimmyHAD For This Useful Post:
ChrisL (10-14-2008)
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10-14-2008, 03:47 AM #6
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Thanked: 150Maybe you could find some sort of decorated stainless breakfast tray with a lip big enough to hold the water. That'd be a kind of classy solution that's functional as well, but not necessary or an easy item to find.
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10-14-2008, 04:40 AM #7
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Thanked: 3795I use a 7x10 pyrex pan. It's the size smaller than the standard lasagna pan size. It's too deep as is but I put a piece of styrofoam in it to raise to the hone to the proper height above the edge of the pan. That way I get no water on table!
The main reason that I use it is because it's what I had handy and it works.Last edited by Utopian; 10-14-2008 at 04:41 AM. Reason: typo
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10-14-2008, 06:31 AM #8
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Thanked: 351ChrisL,
It sounds like a regular low lipped cookie sheet would work for you... I've seen aluminum ones that look very much like cafeteria trays at the local supermarket.
Me.... I just handhold the darn things for razors, I just can't do a decent rolling hone stroke with a bench mounted hone. Drips.... err.... isn't that what pants are for?!?!?!
I've got one of those infernal "Stone Ponds"..... useless afaik. I didn't think things through.... too much cleanup time, too easy to contaminate a finer hone with the slurry of a coarser hone and well... the clamping system sucks......<sigh>. Don't get me wrong, it works but your wet towel on the bench works better and costs less but I do add the rubber stand with the two clamping screws for bench work.
Regards
Kaptain "It's downright amazing how well Shapton Glass hones work.... even without all the Shapton *system* accessories....isn't it?!?!" Zero"Aw nuts, now I can't remember what I forgot!" --- Kaptain "Champion of lost causes" Zero
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10-14-2008, 09:59 AM #9
I use the blue boxes that my nortons came in. It's a very convenient system imo.
If I use my naturals I simply put them on a table with some paper towel underneath.Til shade is gone, til water is gone, Into the shadow with teeth bared, screaming defiance with the last breath.
To spit in Sightblinder’s eye on the Last Day
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10-14-2008, 12:37 PM #10
I've not been using water stones for too long, so I haven't really figured out the best system. Typically I hone at my bathroom sink; I leave the sink full of warm water, put a paper towel down on the sink top, and drag in a chair. The height hoppens to work out and the stone doesn't slide at all. The first time I didn't refresh the water in the sink, and I got a bit of a black ring, but now I know better.