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07-19-2009, 05:20 PM #1
All I currently have is 30x in an old B&L stereoscope and in an eye loupe. If I ever get the extra $ I want to buy a Proscope seen here.
I think the best way to examine and compare an edge from one progression to the other would be to take a photo at each stage and compare them side by side.
I find it difficult to remember what the differences are between progressions just looking at them through the microscope.
Edit; To be honest my main use for magnification is to check the edge for micro chips. Maybe if I had the higher power lenses I would concern myself with the scratch pattern but not with what I now have.Last edited by JimmyHAD; 07-19-2009 at 05:22 PM.
Be careful how you treat people on your way up, you may meet them again on your way back down.
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07-19-2009, 07:15 PM #2
- Join Date
- Feb 2008
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- 1,588
Thanked: 286I have a 3 line american hone i won it on ebay it belonged to a barber but sadly he passed away and never used it so mine is brand new but same as you jimmy i have never used it i have lapped it i have so many coti and now naniwa 12k its choosing which one to use for touch ups i also have the usaul paste. I f your edge edge is not performing would you normally go to ch.5 for a thew laps and if that did'nt do the trick then go to say barber hone or coti 12k etc. did you use paste after barber hone and whats the egde like to say your coticule if you had of used that for touching up edge.
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07-19-2009, 07:49 PM #3
Gary, the "ch.5" ? I don't understand your meaning. If you're referring to 0.5 diamond paste the answer is maybe. In general I have gotten more razors so often that I always have a backlog to hone. I try them after I hone them and if they aren't there yet I may resort to paste or diamond spray .... or chrom ox in between the first and second pass.
I shave with so many different razors that I haven't had to touch one up from using it a lot. Now what I have been doing lately is going back to razors that I honed when I first started out. Some that could have been better honed to begin with and playing around with them on barber hones and or a four sides paddle strop.
I'm finding that those things do work and work well given a chance. There appears to be a learning curve with those as well. At least for me. Hard to teach an old dog new tricks and I am no exception.Be careful how you treat people on your way up, you may meet them again on your way back down.
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07-19-2009, 08:02 PM #4
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- Feb 2008
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Thanked: 286I'm always playing around with new hones and in the last 4 years i have never let a razor get dull as i try them on new hones not giving them time to get dull i hone razors up no probs but i have no experiance with touching up razors i should use one untill it deteriates then try refreshing with one of my finishing hones or my barbers hone.
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07-19-2009, 08:53 PM #5
That is what I am playing around with. I used to avoid the barber hones because I was too lazy to throw a piece of tape on the spine. Now I am giving them a try and finding that the great reputation they have is well deserved. I am fooling around with pastes now too. The diamond spray has been great IME but I didn't like the pasted paddle. Now I am fooling with the paddle and finding that the problem was probably my lack of expertise adn the pasted paddle is a formidable tool. Fun to play around with all of the tools we have to work with.
Be careful how you treat people on your way up, you may meet them again on your way back down.
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07-19-2009, 09:03 PM #6
I think he meant .5 CrOx, as in .5 Chrome
I learned to hone on a barber hone. They are short usually, requiring more strokes and thus cut slower, and they rarely overhone, ever.
Now if you could find a slow hone and prevent it from ever overhoning you'd be buying that hone up in spades to teach guys how to hone. Or you'd be buying barber hones and realizing that you're doing the same thing . . . mmmmmmmmmm
Double bevels are particularly neat with barber hones because you don't have lesser grit to remove, only the grit applied at the secondary bevel geometry.