Originally Posted by
Ben325e
I have a granite reference plate, grade a quality, with a certificate of flatness. over a 1 foot length, it's flat to within +/- 1.05 microns. Just as a comparison, the shapton lapping plate is only accurate to +/-5 microns.
That means that my granite block could be out a total of 2.1 microns, whereas the shapton glass lapping plate could be out a total of 10 microns!
When I flatten using 3m wet/dry sandpaper, I stick it to the granite slab and go at it, with pencil grids the whole way. I also have a granite tile that I bought from Lowes, and out of curiosity I stuck the 3M wet/dry to it, drew some more grids, and had a go at it. It took off the pencil grids in a few laps very evenly.
When you lay the granite tile on the reference plate, it creates quite a suction! From my lapping, I'd say that the tile is pretty much just as flat. It doesn't come with a certificate of flatness, but who cares?
Consider the following scenario:
case 1: granite tile from Lowes with 320 3M wet/dry sandpaper
case 2: granite slab @ +/- 1.2 microns flat with 320 3M wet/dry sandpaper
case 3: Shapton glass lapping plate @ +/-5 microns flat
If I took three shapton 16K glass stones and flattened them, one on each flattening method, and then had one person hone three identical razors on those hones, no one here could tell which razor was honed on which stone given the proper double-blind experiment. They would all get your razor just as scarily sharp as the next one. I'd bet every strop, razor, and hone I have on this against a pair of Zeepk and Selective razors.
So, yeah, go ahead and get yourself some wet/dry sandpaper, a $5 granite tile from Lowes, and go at it, knowing that your stones are pretty much just as really darn flat as the next guys, and you didn't spend 280 bucks on silly frivolities. Plus, the corners of your sandpaper won't dig into your hones like DMT's sometimes are prone to do.
BTW, why do I see all these people getting marble tiles from lowes? Have you ever walked into a machine shop and seen someone checking flatness against a piece of marble? Get granite.... it's better... :)
BTW #2: Anyone who ever recommends the Norton flattening piece of turd, outta be shot with sh*t and killed for stinkin'. THAT piece of junk isn't worth it. After a while you have to flatten it, so that just means that you've been flattening your stones with an un-flat surface, and if that's not the definition of dumb, then I don't know what is. Sorry for my strong feelings on this, but it just needs to be said.