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Thread: Honing Quiz
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12-04-2011, 12:34 AM #1
Honing Quiz
Every now and then I see questions about magnification, hone grits and scratch patten, so here's a quick quiz. The following images are the bevel of the same razor under the same lighting conditions.
Picture C is what the shave-ready edge looks like (after sropping).
The question is what hones the scratch patterns in A and B correspond to.
To make your life easier I'm including a scale (a picture of a ruler placed exactly where the razor is, so there is no discrepancy during different magnifications)
Last edited by gugi; 12-04-2011 at 12:43 AM.
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12-04-2011, 01:25 AM #2
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Thanked: 19I'm guessing A is 1K level, B is 4K level.
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12-04-2011, 01:27 AM #3
Are these synthetic stones?
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12-04-2011, 01:46 AM #4
Yes, they're synthetics, so the grit rating is well defined by the manufacturer.
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12-04-2011, 04:46 PM #5
I think this is a trick question . I think the same hone was used , with pressure on the blade , and without pressure .
Greetings , from Dundalk , Maryland . The place where normal people , fear to go .
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12-05-2011, 01:20 AM #6
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12-05-2011, 02:11 AM #7
Do they both pass the HHT?
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12-05-2011, 02:29 AM #8
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Thanked: 1371King Ice Bear 4k and 6k.
What did I win?
Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
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12-05-2011, 02:52 AM #9
a cinderblock and a piece of cardboard
haha, nah just kidding
ok how about an escher and a brown escherFind me on SRP's official chat in ##srp on Freenode. Link is at top of SRP's homepage
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12-05-2011, 02:53 AM #10
No, no tricks at all. Same way of honing, just different hones. In fact between A and B I did a number of circles on hone B until the previous striations were gone, and then did the regular x-pattern, so that there is no memory effects between the two photographs.
Anyways, hone A is Naniwa 1000 superstone, and hone B is DMT-E i.e. 1200. So pretty much the same grit level.
If you look at the irregularities at the edge and use the size of the ruler to calculate their size you get about 9 microns. They're certainly smaller if you progress up the grits, but I don't have good pictures, and certainly not good enough to be able to measure them the same way you can on these.
In real life looking through the microscope directly shows a lot more detail than I can capture in the photograph. I can hone a razor just using the microscope and never testing the edge - it's not the scratch pattern, but the irregularities on the edge what I'm looking at.