New to honing- Do most use electrical tape only when honing a major restoration or on a new store-bought as well? or never use it?
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New to honing- Do most use electrical tape only when honing a major restoration or on a new store-bought as well? or never use it?
Jeff, I don't mean this negatively, honest I don't, but just typing the word "Tape" in the search parameter will bring up over 100 threads of the exact same question, all of which have the exact same answers repeated time and again, which basically boil down to "Do whatever floats yer boat on taping the spine " :D :D
There are some really really detailed and scientific threads in here about it too, both for and against taping... Enjoy :)
Tough one. How about this . . . I would recommend most beginners honing a new razor use tape!
Welcome to SRP. Forgive my levity in my previous post. Couldn't resist. What gssixgun said is on the money as is what AFDavis11 posted. I used it when I was new on all razors and now only on some of them. One layer of 3M until you feel like you know what you're doing and then it is optional. Check out the SRP Wiki honing tutorials and beginner's guide too. You can find them here.
I don't use it. Wear is a natural part of a razor's life....:)
As previously mentioned, This topic has been well covered on the forum.
Just search for "tape"....
Great first post!!!
I tape every razor I hone with 16 layers of duct tape. Works wonders. Every edge is beyond perfect.......they just look at whiskers and they run away. Of course I am using a yellow stone from a secret layer in a secret mine from a secret place that you just lay the razor on for a few seconds and then let your magical stop just touch the razor for an instant and you're all done.
All the best,
Lynn
Ward, don't be so tough on the beaver.
Lyn you know as well as i do that the best edges come off the bench grinder followed by a good stropping on 80 grit sandpaper. When you use your grinder remember that if there are no sparks flying your doing it wrong. lol
sure thing i enjoy helping you guys learn the new meathod of sharpening. By the way there is one fraise that i cant belive was aired on cable tv(ward you were a lil hard on the beaver last night) lol
Tape has two common purposes.
The most common is to protect the spine when
more aggressive honing is done to reshape or
restore a blade. Tape makes a lot of sense
when using a hone coarser than 1K grit.
The second is to adjust (increase) the angle of the
finished edge. In some cases this adjustment is
designed to produce a micro bevel. Increasing the angle
can also result in a slightly less fragile edge or
just present a much smaller amount of steel to a
fine but slow finishing hone.
With a previously well set bevel and finer hones like the
4K/8K Norton combo and finer there is little or no reason
for tape (IMO).
I had to breadknife out a nick in a smiling wedge, and really wish I'd used tape when resetting the bevel. Ended up with really uneven wear on the spine, and in the end put on two layers just to get ANYTHING to happen.
Other than that, I don't tape. Eventually I'll try to reset that wedge without tape, but I wanted to shave with it again.