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Thread: How to Hone a Wedge (no hollow)
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10-17-2008, 08:58 PM #3
- Join Date
- Feb 2008
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Thanked: 174If you tape the spine, you will develop a distinct V or U at the edge of the blade
However, if you ever need to remove that V, you will have to remove a lot of metal.
Just think about that before you use tape.
Developing the new V with tape is easy. Removing it will take forever.
I give you this warning not because taping a wedge is such a bad thing, but plastic is not metal and you will find your V is not as precise with a taped spine, because the plastic also gets honed and so you may end up with a curved V not a precise flat edged V. Flat V's are good, Curved V's are bad.
So my advice would be to try first to get a grippy edge without taping. If you can do this at the 8000 grit level, then move onto Chromium Oxide on a flat bed leather hone. Don't overhone or you will quickly loose that grippy edge.
When you have smoothed the edge on the Chromium Oxide then go to a flat bed leather hone to strop and then see if you are happy with the shave.
If you can not get this process to work for you, then, go to the tape.
For the record, I have found it is easy to get that grippy edge on a "full" wedge with 1000 grit wet and dry
paper but I find it easy to overhone and loose the grippy edge as I progress to refine and smooth the edge.
So once you have a grippy edge, I have found that less strokes rather than more in your polishing development is better.
I hope this makes sense.
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The Following User Says Thank You to English For This Useful Post:
darrensandford (10-27-2008)