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  1. #1
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    Default My first honing experience

    Good morning all,

    So I first hone my razor following Bart's article on Yellow Coticule + BBW

    I first hone with the yellow coticule with a slurry until I pass the TNT test, then I switch to the BBW with a slurry and finally I polish with the coticule again but with water only.

    My dificulties arises when it comes to the BBW with slurry. I cannot see the steel mixing the slurry and water, and thus I cannot determine if the hone really cuts the steel. I use this stone with no presure on the blade, I don't know if I should put some pressure on the blade as I hone. After around 50 strokes or so, I start diluting the slurry with water every 10 strokes until the slurry is gone.

    After that, I perform a TPT test, and quite frankly, I don't know if I pass it or not. Since I have no experience on TPT, I cannot tell if I pass the test or not. From what I read on the wiki, I do not think I pass it, but because I was not sure enough, I jumped to the polish fase.

    In there, using the coticule with only water I could see how the hone was cutting the steel, and I was aplying very light pressure on the blade, merely acompaning the blade as I was doing the X strokes.

    After that, I did a TPT test again. It felt more sharp, but not really much different than with the BBW. HHT test failed by all means.

    I did a go to the shave yesterday night, and I had the smoothest shave in many months. I did just a ATG shave and I ended up very satisfied of the razor. I did not have any pull and I got a very nice shave.

    My worries now reside on the BBW stone. How much pressure should I use on the blade? Should I see how the stone is cutting the steel? I haave the sensation I could go from coticule with slurry to coticule with water and I would not feel the difference...

    Thanks for any advice!
    Last edited by Hammett; 09-07-2009 at 09:31 AM.

  2. #2
    They call me Mr Bear. Stubear's Avatar
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    I think what it really comes down to at the end of the day is the shave. If you get a good shave, with no pull and irritation then you have a good edge!

    From reading the Wiki, posts by experienced honemeisters and my own (fairly limited at this point) experience, I would say that you want to have very minimal pressure on the blade. Just the weight of the blade is enough! If you puts lots of pressure of the blade you will put deeper striations in the edge which might make your shave more uncomfortable. There is also the chance of bending the edge up under pressure, which will ruin it and then you're back to square one. Just let the stone do the work.

    The tests like HHT and AHT seem to be very subjective. People with very fine hair will get different results to those with very thick coarse hair. Again, the consensus from what I've read seems to be that the best test is "Does it shave well?". If it does, great. If not, the edge needs some more work.

    The Wiki has this to say about the TPT;

    1. If the edge has a faint tickling sensation and just starts to grip onto your thumb pad then you are in the right neighbourhood for a shave test.
    2. If the edge bites and grips your thumb pad relentlessly wanting to cut in and not let go, then the edge may be over honed.
    3. If the edge tickles your thumb and feels like a very sharp knife with a good cutting edge then you are not sharp enough. This sensation is usually felt coming off a medium hone like a 4,000 grit water stone.


    I've seen a few pictures of the BBW's and they are quite dark coloured which may make it difficult to see the metal particles that have been removed. I use Shapton ceramics and they are a white stone, and you can really see the swarf building up! Its probably just the colour of the stone and the slurry that makes it hard to see the particles. If the razor is dull and then after honing its sharp, then the BBW is removing metal!

    I think, as long as you're getting a good durable edge that gives a comfortable shave then its fairly safe to say that you are doing things correctly!

    PS: I dont want to go misleading anyone here, so if there are some more experienced honemeisters out there then please add to/ correct my advice. I'm more than man enough to take it and I`m not too proud to admit I`m wrong! :-)

    Incidentally, do you like the edge the BBW gives you? I was wondering whether to get a small one as a touch up hone for travel.

  3. #3
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    Thanks for the advice!

    I do not shave out of the BBW, but out of the coticule with water.

    What I have found out with the BBW is that when I come out the coticule with slurry, the bevel is very groovy, but after the BBW it gets much more smooth.

    Reading extensively this forum I read several times that it is not advisable to shave out of a BBW because is a 4K grit and some other higher grit hone is necessary to polish the edge.

    When I come out of the BBW, i feel the TPT test to be like this:

    3. If the edge tickles your thumb and feels like a very sharp knife with a good cutting edge then you are not sharp enough. This sensation is usually felt coming off a medium hone like a 4,000 grit water stone.

    Should I get going on the BBW? Do I need to go back to coticule+slurry to get a better bevel?

  4. #4
    Bon Viveur dannywonderful's Avatar
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    You got a smooth shave from the razor! I wouldn't worry about it too much! I followed the advice in the wiki and did around 100 laps on a coticule with slurry, diluting to just water for the last few laps, around 100 laps on a BBW with slurry, diluting to a light slurry for the last few laps, then finished with around 100 laps on a coticule with just water. I tested the edge throughout to make sure it was even and then I tested by shaving with it. If I ever get a bad shave then I'll go back and try and work out where I went wrong, but otherwise I'll just keep doing what I'm doing.

  5. #5
    They call me Mr Bear. Stubear's Avatar
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    I dont know much about the natural stones, but I was under the impression that the coticule is the higher grit and the BBW is the lower? If that is the case then you will want to start on the BBW with slurry and then water, then onto the coticule with slurry and then with water to get that progression from a coarse grit right up to a fine polishing finish.

    Bart did a video on here somewhere where he honed a razor from dull to shave readyness all on the BBW with varying thicknesses of slurry, so it can be done! I cant find the video at the moment but it was a fairly recent post.

    Basically, if your edge is dull you want to start on the lower grit stone(s) until you have a good bevel set, then move onto the higher grit polishing stones ONLY once you have that good foundation to move on from.

    Otherwise you're just polishing a dull edge. It'll look all nice and shiny, but wont shave worth a damn...!

    But I still think that if you're getting a good shave from whatever it is you're doing at the moment just keep doing that. Don't worry about the tests and all that jazz, the only true test is the shave test and if that gives good results for you then stick with it!

    You said in your first post that you got a smooth and very nice shave, so it sounds like you have a good edge. Going back to the hones just risks overhoning and dulling the edge.

    If it aint broke, dont fix it!

  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by Stubear View Post
    I dont know much about the natural stones, but I was under the impression that the coticule is the higher grit and the BBW is the lower? If that is the case then you will want to start on the BBW with slurry and then water, then onto the coticule with slurry and then with water to get that progression from a coarse grit right up to a fine polishing finish.
    That is partly correct. A coticule is higher grit than the BBW, but when it comes to slurry, a coticule with slurry has lower grit than a BBW with slurry, that's why I start with the coticule w/ slurry

    I followed a wiki post by Bart with a DMT + BBW w/ slurry + coticule w/ water. At the end of that article he states that a coticule w/ slurry can set a bevel as well because the slurry is very abrasive.

    I am happy with the shave I got yesterday, really I am, but if I can get an even a smoother one, why not go for it?

    My concern is that I think I am doing something wrong in the BBW (to few strokes maybe). The lack of a test to tell me to move to the polishing stone makes me wonder when is the right time. I do not want to overhone, but neither to underhone (does this word exist??)

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    I really do understand what you're saying. After all, thats the quest we are all on, to find the best possible shaving edge and attain that fabled BBS shave. I just think if you have an edge that shaves well and works for you then you should probably leave it at that. Just my $0.02..!

    The reason I say that is that you might have already reached (or very nearly reached) the "optimum" sharpness for your blade, so any additional honing is either going to derive little additional benefit or overhone and ultimately degrade the edge. I dont want to to say "try this or that" and offer bad advice! When in doubt, call in the professionals!

    So, if you really want to see how sharp your razor can get and are unsure of the tests and where the edge is at now then my advice would be to send it to a honemeister. That way you will avoid damaging the edge inadvertantly and it will clarify what a "shave ready edge" really is. Plus it provides a benchmark to aim for when you are honing yourself.

  8. #8
    Senior Member blabbermouth JimmyHAD's Avatar
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    Hammett it seems to me that you are on the right path here. The smooth shave is what counts but like you I want it to be as good as it gets so I will try to push the envelope. What my friend Randydance taught me regarding the TPT was to take a new DE or SE blade and get the feel of what a sharp edge feels like alternately with the straight I am honing. It worked for me.

    The way I understand it the BBW had larger garnets than the yollow and therefore cuts differently. At least I am pretty sure that is what Bart has posted in the past. In terms of honing on the bbw with slurry, I take and start to see if the blade will pop hair off the forearm without touching the skin.

    Now you can also see if it will shave hair off the forearm touching the skin if you don't have many razors to hone or care whether you're going to be walking around with bald spots on your arm.

    When I first got started honing many ebay specials people thought I had some sort of skin disease with all of the patches of hair gone on my arms and legs. Now I have gotten to where I can feel the edge grab the hair and I know where the sharpness is without actually cutting the hair.
    Be careful how you treat people on your way up, you may meet them again on your way back down.

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    Quote Originally Posted by JimmyHAD View Post
    What my friend Randydance taught me regarding the TPT was to take a new DE or SE blade and get the feel of what a sharp edge feels like alternately with the straight I am honing. It worked for me.
    Thanks for this, it is just what I needed. Don't know why I didn't think of it before.

    Mike

  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by JimmyHAD View Post
    What my friend Randydance taught me regarding the TPT was to take a new DE or SE blade and get the feel of what a sharp edge feels like alternately with the straight I am honing. It worked for me.
    Excuse me, but since I am not a native English speaker... What does DE and SE stand for? (dumb question I know...)

    Quote Originally Posted by JimmyHAD View Post
    In terms of honing on the bbw with slurry, I take and start to see if the blade will pop hair off the forearm without touching the skin
    What should I do in the case hair does not pop up ? Continue honing? Revert to set bevel? This is actually what happens to me with the BBW

    Quote Originally Posted by JimmyHAD View Post
    When I first got started honing many ebay specials people thought I had some sort of skin disease with all of the patches of hair gone on my arms and legs.
    I already have several bald spots in my left arm and both legs :P

    I have 2 Straight. One cheap that I bought from a local store and the other is a vintage Solingen.

    I donĀ“t want to screw the Solingen, so I learn with the cheap one

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