Beat me to it Stefan :) It really depends on the prior state of the razor & the speed & density of the stone. But yes experimenting will teach you the nature or potential of your stone.
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What negatives have you guys found using thick slurry on the quick ones? Not as sharp? Removes excessive amounts of metal? Or something else I haven't yet thought of? This is all still a tiny bit new to me, although I have to say I Looooooove the edges I'm getting w/ this. :tameshigiri: (No weepers, however!)
No real negatives if the right amount of strokes are used but if I understood your process it takes some time. You can remove a lot of metal. To give an example I used a fast Suita with normal slurry on a razor that was close. I gave it 20 strokes. The edge looked good & the bevel really polished up. Another 10 strokes turned it into a hacksaw blade :) Of course if that razor was less sharp I could have done more to it. Just depends on what you're working with.
Hacksaw blade? You mean microchipped? Sounds like these stones have a huge range of properties! On my Kiita, the only real danger is my wrist starting to hurt from holding the stone for too long! :rofl2:
Mine is definitely slow--I usually refresh the slurry once if I'm coming off the Norton, to make sure the scratches are wiped out before the slurry breaks down & goes into polishing-mode--although I have gone to it straight off the D8E once, just for fun. Took entirely too long, but it did work. Eventually. :D
(Speaking of which, I definitely need to pick up a pocket-size DMT-C on my next Woodcraft run--the full size plate knocks most of the slurry off the edge)