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  1. #1
    Senior Member Korndog's Avatar
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    Default Naniwa Super Polish

    I bought this wonderful stone a few months ago and have found it to be a superb polishing stone for my knives. I used it on my razors expecting similar results. The funny thing is that I never got any razor really really sharp with it. Yes, I could get a decent shave, but not that special edge quality that we strive for. I just honed my TI Egyptian with 2 1/3 passes on my Kitayama 8k and Shapton Pro 15k as a touch up to see if It would improve on the Naniwa edge. I stropped with impregnated balsa at 0.5 and 0.25 micron as usual and this thing will pop any hair anywhere. I shaved with it and it was so friggin sharp that I actually had a couple of nicks from setting the blade, which is very rare for me. Note that this level of sharpness was achieved with all of 8 laps on the stones. Lynn says that less is more when it comes to honing and I am beginning to get it now.

  2. #2
    Senior Member mgraepel's Avatar
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    Default

    A lot of people comment that the .25 strop paste makes things a little too sharp for them. How long have you been using that for?

    *EDIT*
    Wow, just found some great information on japanese water stones at bladeforums.com.

    I have a few of the beasties:
    http://members.cox.net/~yuzuha/toishi.jpg

    There are a ton of them I haven't tried but here's my 2 cents based on the stuff I have tried and things that others have said.

    There are several types of water stones. Clay bonded are sort of like a flower pot with aluminum oxide mixed in (often red and smell like a flower pot too). Then there are the magnesia stones, these are made by mixing the abrasive with a sort of plaster-like cement... Suehiro white stones are of this type. Then there are your resin bonded stones (abrasive is mixed with a sort of plastic resin and baked at a low temp.). Shapton pro stones are this type.

    Shapton pro are very hard. Good for stainless, very fast, polishing stones are good on softer steels (easy to dull a hard blade on the 8k-15k if you don't hold the angle pretty carefully). Don't absorb water (and don't soak too long or the surface becomes rubbery). Don't form a slurry (other than the normal swarf) Shapton M5 are their cheap "half stones" The M24 only go up to 5k and are made for kitchen knives and people who like to push hard when they are sharpening. The M15 go up to 12k and are made for carpenters... they do form a slurry and act more like a typical waterstone. The Lr-250 and Hippo stones are huge versions for professional sharpeners.

    Naniwa Super are similar to Shapton pro (resin bond) but rather soft so you can gouge them with a thin edge but easier to polish a hard blade (less likely to dull an edge due to free-hand slop on the polish stones. They also make a "snow white" 8k magnesia stone that is quite popular. Do not soak the Super stones or they turn rubbery. http://www.rakuten.co.jp/sekinohamon...526009/526012/ and http://www.rakuten.co.jp/sekinohamon...526009/624415/ Korin, Japan Woodworker, Hidatool and Sushivan carry Naniwa (they have a pic of an ebi -lobster or shrimp- on them)


    Kitayama (North Mountain) 8k Superpolish stone... has the feel of a natural stone (and contains natural stone powder) forms a nice slurry that will break down further while polishing and produce a finish equivalent to a 10k or 12k stone. Medium hardness, medium wear. Arashiyama (Storm Mountain) are similar but I hear they are more suited to carbon steels. No need to soak

    MinoSharp (sometimes listed as Global) come in a box with two sharpening guides for kitchen knives. These hold just the right amount of water (soak these) and handle like a natural stone (and leave a more mat-like finish like a natural stone too) forming a little bit of slurry. But, may leave a dark haze on some stainless steels (won't wash off, but another stone or SOS pad will remove it as it is just mud stuck in the pores of the steel). Slower than the Shaptons, but more fun to use.

    Norton. These are US waterstones and they have the grit off a little (I hear tell that the 4k is closer to Shapton's 2k and the 8k is closer to to 5k or 6k). These are economical, cut well and come in a nice 3" width (be careful you don't get the 2" wide if you are looking for a cheaper price). Slower than Shaptons and wear faster but are much thicker too so it is a wash. Lots of people like these, especially for honing straight razors.

    Matsunaga King makes so many stones that they are all over the place... everything from Sun Tiger carbide stones to the popular Super and Hyper series as well as cheap home stones. Here is their Japanese site that lists all the stones they make http://www.matsunaga-corp.co.jp/kakutoishi/01.html most appear to be clay bond (these can be kept in water), but they even have a well reviewed 1k diamond/ceramic stone (runs about $170 though). Anyway quality can be so-so to very good, depending on which ones you get.

    Oribest are made by Sigma Power Company and are hard ceramic (decent but not rated as highly as some others)

    Suehiro... they make white/yellow magnesia stones. Medium soft, slower than some of the others but easy to use. Decent stones but not outstanding. Don't absorb much water so you can just splash them. They don't form a lot of slurry unless you use a nagura, but the slurry can grab the back of a deba or the flat side of a chisel (air suction). They also make the ceramic CERAX stones.

    Bester.... hard ceramic. Harder and more wear resistant than some of the others but slower. HoB has one if I remeber correctly so I'll let him comment on these.

    Basically softer stones work well on hard steels (>Rc60) since they cut a bit faster and the polish stones are less likely to round your nice sharp edge (the edge may just make a tiny gouge in the stone if you goof the angle on a stroke).

    Hard stones seem to control the edge of softer steels better.

    Nagura and stones that form a slurry help control burrs (basically the polishing slurry abrades the back of the edge, and the burr, as well as the side that is touching the stone). The slurry on the Mountain Blue stones and the Kitayama also break down and become finer so produce a finer finish than their actual grit would indicate (polish on the slurry)

    You may find some stones leave a bright scratch pattern, some leave a smoother more mat finish like natural stones and some will load up the pores in things like D2 or stainless and leave a dark haze (mud caught in the tiny pores, which is the reason I mentioned the Shapton Pro and Naniwa stones are good for stainless... think the Kitayama and Suehiro are also okay, but the Minosharp and most of the natural stones will do this)

    Coarse stones wear very fast so get the big green or pink "bricks". You should probably also get your regular 800 to 1500 grit in single stones too, since you will use them the most. You can save money by getting combo stones in grits over 3000 (finish stones wear more slowly and you use them less)


    Epicurean Edge
    http://www.thebestthings.com/newtool...aterstones.htm
    http://www.hidatool.com/woodpage/stones.html
    Tools for Working Wood http://www.japanwoodworker.com/dept.asp?dept_id=13098
    http://www.bladegallery.com/accessories/stonepage.asp
    some 9" round coarse naniwa stones here http://www.sushivan.com/b2b/mk/mk_m.asp?subcode=99
    http://www.craftsmanstudio.com/html_p/N!LWS.htm (they also offer DMT diamond kits with a Norton 8k http://www.craftsmanstudio.com/html_p/T!D8.htm )

    In Europe http://www.shokunin.co.uk/shokunin.htm
    http://www.dick.biz/ (english version, tools, sharpening tools)
    http://www.fine-tools.com/scharf.htm
    Last edited by mgraepel; 03-24-2006 at 09:24 PM.

  3. #3
    Senior Member Joe Lerch's Avatar
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by mgraepel
    A lot of people comment that the .25 strop paste makes things a little too sharp for them. How long have you been using that for?
    All people are saying when they say that or that the razor is less forgiving is that the razor requires more of an adjustment than they're willing to make. If you are willing to make the adjustment you can improve your shave.

    From my point of view, I'll take all the sharpness I can get and make the necessary adjustments as I use the razor.

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