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  1. #1
    Texas Guy from Missouri LarryAndro's Avatar
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    Default Naniwa & Spike Mystery

    I have been using the Naniwa 1K, 3K, 5K, 8K & 12K followed by stropping. (Leaving out details of stropping, as it does not apply to question.) Typically, my progression goes thru the hones in order.

    Last night, I honed a Spike that mystified me. I set the bevel on the 1K, and used the 3K. All is well, and the razor is sharp. But, by the 12K the razor was noticeably duller. Unacceptably dull.

    I repeated every different approach to hone progression. More pressure, light pressure, less or more passes, pyramids, some passes with spine leading (heard helps if overhoned... ?).

    After a long time I gave up and stopped after the 3K, stropped and shaved. The blade was sharp at 3K, and sharp after stropping. But, without doubt, still not up to my sharpness standards.

    Even more mystifying to me is that the razor shaved well. Can someone explain?

    Asking the same question a little more explicitly, does anyone using a similar hone setup ever skip hones? Do you ever skip the top end of hones like I did? Do you ever use the top hone(s), but skip hones in the middle?

  2. #2
    Senior Member blabbermouth JimmyHAD's Avatar
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    Day before yesterday I honed an old TI Spartacus that I got from ebay. The seller sold a lot that had belonged to a barber. Micro chipping not apparent to the naked eye led me to tape the spine and do circles on my 1200 diamond plate. Once the edge was cleaned up I removed the tape and went to the Naniwa super 1k. Did 40 circles on each side and followed up with x strokes and got a good TNT. More x strokes and circles until the razor easily shaved leg hair all across the blade.

    X stroke pyramid on the 3/5 starting at 20 and following the procedure Lynn posted in the SRP Wiki. I finished with 15 strokes on the 8k and got one heckuva shave (after 50 and 50 on the strop) Last night I took the blade to the Chinese 12k and did 125 weight of the blade x strokes. One of the smoothest closest shaves I've ever gotten followed.

    So this doesn't really answer the question but I don't know the answer. I routinely do a 3/5 pyramid and then test shave. The next night go up in grit to an 8 and then to the 12k naniwa super. FWIW, I have the 2k and the 10k naniwa also but haven't used them yet. So I guess I am skipping some grits. I don't know why your razor appeared to get duller as you went up the ladder.

    If it was me I guess I would start over and try fewer strokes as I moved up. With this TI that I mention and with any razor I'm really focusing on getting the bevel setting before I move along. Taking what David Polan said, that most razors with sharpening problems have inadequate bevel setting, I follow that advice and really work on that.
    Be careful how you treat people on your way up, you may meet them again on your way back down.

  3. #3
    I used Nakayamas for my house mainaman's Avatar
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    Default

    It could be related to the hones themselves @ their respective grit levels.
    I have a 3k chosera, that when used with slurry will work very fast on most razors, but will also chip the edged on some razors which to me means that depending on the steel you might have to use stones from different lines. When you go up in the progression with superstones, they become easier to gouge, may be due to that and the steel properties you are damaging the edge?
    If possible try other set of stones and see what happens.
    Stefan

  4. #4
    The original Skolor and Gentileman. gugi's Avatar
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    no idea what's the actual problem, but here are my thoughts on few things that are definitely wrong.

    did you look at the edge under magnification? it is possible that you mistook dull overhoned edge on 1k for sharp.
    more troubling is that your progression approach sounds wrong - you seem to be honing without any regard to actual 'progress' on the edge.
    you are saying after 1k and 3k the razor was 'sharp', but after 12k it wasn't.
    now there are two more hones that you used in that gap, so when exactly did the razor start getting duller, and why did you continue with higher grit hones at that point? and how do you determine how dull the razor is?

  5. #5
    Texas Guy from Missouri LarryAndro's Avatar
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    I left out a lot of the approaches I used, preferring to ask a more general question. Pyramid honing, etc. Some of what was mentioned above, I tried, and some I didn't.

    I will continue to work on this razor until I understand what is happening. I will use the microscope extensively at every stage to get a better idea of what is happening. I welcome other suggestions.

    The blade seems like it is softer metal than most vintage blades I've used. If true, it suggests to me the possibility that I have to learn a strategy designed for this type blade.

  6. #6
    Senior Member blabbermouth JimmyHAD's Avatar
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    Re-reading your OP reminded me of something that Bart had pointed out some time ago. When using various hair tests whether HHT or arm hair the razor may appear sharper in the earlier stages and less so as the striations are polished out and they don't catch the hair as they did with the more pronounced striations. I don't know what tests you were using to judge keenness but that is something to consider if cutting hair entered into it.
    Be careful how you treat people on your way up, you may meet them again on your way back down.

  7. #7
    Texas Guy from Missouri LarryAndro's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by JimmyHAD View Post
    ...I don't know what tests you were using to judge keenness but that is something to consider if cutting hair entered into it.
    Good question. Shaving is the test, and the razor eventually passed this test. But, while honing, I wasn't shaving to test, (which I have done on occasion.)

    I use the TPT, and a modified HHT. I've honed about 100 razors now. So, have moved from the beginning newbie honer to the confused newbie honer level. During this time, I have somewhat developed a feel for a sharp, good shaving blade based on the TPT. (I run the blade along its length, very lightly, feeling the ease with which it slices into my skin.)

    I also use a modification of the HHT where the slicing of the hair is nice if it occurs, but is not the initial focus of the test. Rather, I watch the vibration of the hair at the end of the hair. I always use my own hair. And, I believe I have a sense of the relative sharpness of the blade based on vibration. Set the bevel on 1K and do the modified HHT, and the vibration gives me valuable feedback on the sharpness of the blade. Is it sharp enough so the edge is dropping into the "chinks" between hair sections?

    Even if the hair is not cut, after I used the modified HHT along its length, I have a pretty good idea which sections of the blade are sharper.

    So, JimmyHAD, that is how I'm judging sharpness. Based on the TPT and the modified HHT, I believe the blade is less sharp by the time I get to the upper hones.

  8. #8
    Know thyself holli4pirating's Avatar
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    When I start getting frustrated with a razor, I find it's best to put it down, stop honing for a while, then resume with other blades. Once I've cleared my head and reassured myself that I do indeed know how to hone, I'll come back to the problem blade for a fresh start - including reinspecting/reassessing the razor.

    If you can't hone anything else, then it's time to look into a number of things. Are you really setting good bevels (can you shave arm hair with them? how is TNT or TPT?), are all your hones well lapped, have you gone through a progression with no pressure all the way, what is the edge like at each step of honing? You really need to do investagative work to figure out which step is causing the problem, rather than saying method x, method y, and method z all fail to produce the final result I want.

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  10. #9
    The original Skolor and Gentileman. gugi's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by holli4pirating View Post
    When I start getting frustrated with a razor, I find it's best to put it down, stop honing for a while, then resume with other blades. Once I've cleared my head and reassured myself that I do indeed know how to hone, I'll come back to the problem blade for a fresh start - including reinspecting/reassessing the razor.
    you must've been to medina recently...

  11. #10
    Texas Guy from Missouri LarryAndro's Avatar
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    Skip Medina. Clear the room of pets and children and take that problem razor and play straight razor darts...

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