Results 1 to 10 of 33
-
07-25-2010, 03:52 AM #1
How Many Hones Does A Beginner Need ?
so if I'm a beginner how many stones do I need
-
07-25-2010, 05:26 AM #2
For now I'd say a beginner only needs one, a Swatty barber's hone for the occasional touch up. Check the SRP Classifieds before hitting eBay.
Before you get into honing, read up on hones in the Wiki here. Digest that information first. Then you'll have a pretty good idea as to what you'll be needing based on what you plan to do.
I picked up a Norton 220/1000 and use the 1000 side for setting the bevel (the 220 side is only used when a razor has fairly large chips in the edge). I have a 4K for sharpening, an 8K for polishing and a 12K Chinese hone for final finishing.
Namaste,
Morty -_-
-
-
07-25-2010, 05:32 AM #3
- Join Date
- Jan 2009
- Location
- Bangkok, Thailand
- Posts
- 1,659
Thanked: 235I think as a beginner the only hone you need is a finishing hone. This can be many different types of hones. Could be a barber hone, could be a synthetic high grit hone (12k to 30k or higher), Japanese stones, coticules, or thungurians. As you get more and more confident, or want to spend more and more money, get the next hone down in the progression.
But you could go the rest of your life only needing to use the finishing hone.
-
-
07-25-2010, 05:42 AM #4
I'm piggybacking, but it's related...
Could a razor go its whole life (let's say 10 years) using only a barber's hone for the occasional touch-up? Suppose the blade has been properly honed on day 1 (4k/8k etc.)... is it possible to use the barber's hone frequently to keep the blade nice and sharp, and forego any other serious honing? Or must it still be honed with a lower grit every now and then?
Just curious :-)
-
07-25-2010, 07:54 AM #5
I've heard of guys who've been doing this for 20 years with only a barbers hone and strop... I can't speak from experience, though.
To the OP, that's a question that we can't answer fully without knowing what you're wanting to do... I guess the answer of what you "need", by default without any more information, is 1 (barbers hone or other finisher).
There are simply too many permutations of setups and intentions to just take a stab in the dark (if you want a meaningful answer, that is)...
-
The Following User Says Thank You to richmondesi For This Useful Post:
fish4life (07-25-2010)
-
07-25-2010, 10:42 AM #6
I'm going to buck the trend here, & say none.
A barbers hone will do the job, but a paddle, or loom strop pasted with CrO will be easier for you to maintain an edge with.
-
The Following User Says Thank You to ben.mid For This Useful Post:
fish4life (07-25-2010)
-
07-25-2010, 11:40 AM #7
Until he rounds the edge, then you would need a more agressive hone than simply a finisher to bring the edge back. You can not get by with just a pasted strop indefinately, but you may be able to with just a barber's hone or other finisher.
Pasted strops are good, but they will not be an introduction to honing, which I can see the OP wishes to gain. IMO they delayed my into to honing as once they stopped working I had to send my razor out to be honed, whereas had I invested in a finisher I would have been able to polish my edge.
-
The Following User Says Thank You to Scipio For This Useful Post:
fish4life (07-25-2010)
-
07-25-2010, 11:56 AM #8
I would say a beginner doesn't need any hones for at least the first three months. After that a pasted strop or pasted paddle strop w/ CrOx will keep things going for a bunch more time. If the razor needs honing in the first year sent it out to an experienced honemister listed in the classifieds and w/ a lot of time on SRP.
In my time here on SRP I have seen that beginners have three major areas that cause problems. Bad technique, rolling the edge on a strop and bad honing. Lots of times bad technique causes the person to go to the hones and it really only makes things worse. Pick up two razors that are shave ready. Only use one razor until it is damaged or starts tugging ( after several months) and them hit the pastes or send it out for a honing. Learn to shave before trying to hone. The cost of honing one razor is minimal to the cost of a hone(s) and a lot less fristrating for a newbie.“If you always do what you always did, you will always get what you always got.” (A. Einstein)
-
The Following User Says Thank You to Joed For This Useful Post:
fish4life (07-25-2010)
-
07-25-2010, 12:40 PM #9
I can only tell you my experience. I am not a honemiester, but I have been shaving with str8's for quite awhile. 1 barbers hone frome Ebay under the bathroom sink (for touch ups). 1 4000 8000 grit from Nortons in the garage once you get to the point of the razor starts pulling and you find that that razor has moved to the back of the rotation.
-
The Following User Says Thank You to Wintchase For This Useful Post:
fish4life (07-25-2010)
-
07-25-2010, 01:13 PM #10
I know where you're coming from, but that's just a matter of opinion. Personally, I use hones. That's the way I learned because when I started I got all my advice from this forum.
If you do some reading on the German forums, there are guys there that set bevels with paste & then do the whole progression. It does give a different shaped edge from that set by a hone, but there's nothing wrong with it.
-
The Following User Says Thank You to ben.mid For This Useful Post:
fish4life (07-25-2010)