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02-08-2012, 02:03 AM #1
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Thanked: 247On the brink here. It was shaving arm hair 3 hours ago.
Ok fellahs. I'm not having fun anymore. lol. At first, I didn't know, but thought I knew. Then I knew I didn't know, but was still, through persistence, and weeks of honing, able to make a razor (ONE RAZOR)shave ready. Now, I just can't do it any longer. I will not spend 2 weeks, 2-4 hours per day honing one razor any more. I've watched the videos, I've done the steps, I've used all the little tips and tricks SRP can muster...I really am just not getting it. Those few stellar performers in my line up just must have been so close to shave ready when I picked them up, that I couldn't make it worse. I need help. Is there anyone on here that can teach me how to sharpen a razor to shaving sharp that's closer than 3.5 hours from Mattoon, IL? As much as I'd like to have Lynn's help, it's a really long haul for someone in a 4x4 on a fixed income. lol. I've had some of my edges evaluated and I'd consider it confirmed that I know what shaving sharp feels like. But this is ridiculous. With this amount of time invested per razor, all learning goes out the window. There's just no way to catalog 25000 strokes on one razor, and interpret that data. It's obvious to me, that I did something wrong 95 percent of the time, and something right 5 percent of the time. But somebody is gonna have to stand over me barking orders in order for me to get it I guess. AAAAAARRRGH!!! Sorry for the rant...
If you skipped all that up there: Anybody closer than 3.5 hours from Mattoon, IL willing to teach me how to sharpen a razor in an efficient manner? This is 5 months I've been deluding myself...
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02-08-2012, 02:47 AM #2
Joe,
While I'm many miles and many states away and I can't help you on account I'm not very good at this honing thing, I feel your pain and I want to offer my commiseration to you.
Obviously you have the drive and patience, but... a week stroking that stone, brother? You state that you tried everything; since you don't go in detail I will share my experience and mistakes and see if you can draw a parallel and get on the right track.
I'll skip over the coticule unicot honing. That was a one off experience that took me around five hours to, er..., shave ready in the sense I shaved with it. I will say no more other than I'm not a unicot fan. Yet.
My first mistake was to not have a proper loupe to check the bevel. It was also the biggest, because if you don't have a good bevel you will never, ever, in your life get that blade to the keenness you need to shave with it.
My second mistake was to overlook the sharpie method to verify you are stroking the blade flat and proper on the stone. Search for it to get detailed instructions, but in a nutshell it consists of setting a basic bevel, painting it with a sharpie and giving it one stroke. Check it with the loupe and if your stroke is faulty, it'll be painfully obvious.
My third mistake was to assume I knew the pyramid method from just counting. It took me several askings until I came up with the secret, which I here bestow upon you for absolutely no charge. Testing. Do your 4k rotation, go to the 8K, TEST. If bad, go back to the beginning. If you blindly go back and forth, and even by chance you are there, when you go down in grit you undo your work. The pyramid is repeatable and reliable, and I suspect Lynn meant it to be easy for the noobs to get there easily. (Thank you Lynn; we are all in your debt.)
Fourth mistake, if you are keeping track. Not giving it a rest. I was so intent on getting there, and not seeing where my mistakes were that I was blinded by pride and determination. Walking away is sometimes a good thing. You come back not so tired, not so frustrated and, yes, angry, and you may just catch your mistake.
And that's it. I'm assuming your stones are properly lapped and in good trim, because I don't think you can get shave ready from an uneven stone.
Best of luck,
Marcos
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regularjoe (02-08-2012)
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02-08-2012, 02:57 AM #3
Maybe someone could do a skype session with you, help diagnose the flaws in your technique and give a few pointers. Id do it, but I dont feel entirely qualified...
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regularjoe (02-08-2012)
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02-08-2012, 03:01 AM #4
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Thanked: 2027you just need to buy more stones is all
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02-08-2012, 03:07 AM #5
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Thanked: 2591what stone are you using for bevel setting?
Stefan
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02-08-2012, 03:47 AM #6
I get the impression from reading your post that you've done alright with other razors ? FWIW, sometimes you'll get one that is a beast to hone. The fact that it was cutting arm hair and then with further honing wasn't, makes me wonder if you didn't miscue somewhere along the line.
The reason Stefan (mainaman) asked you what bevel setter you're using ..... IMHO ...... is because in many cases the bevel set isn't adequate and the honing that follows is essentially continuing the bevel set on stones that are too fine to do the job. Anyway, post a pic of both sides of the blade and maybe someone can assess the condition to see if that may have something to do with the issue.Be careful how you treat people on your way up, you may meet them again on your way back down.
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regularjoe (02-08-2012)
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02-08-2012, 03:51 AM #7
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Thanked: 4942Come down to Cape. It will be worth it. Think of the hours of frustration that will go away.........
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regularjoe (02-08-2012)
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02-08-2012, 04:08 AM #8
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Thanked: 247Pixelfixed, you read my posts! lol.
Thanks to everyone so far that helped. Mainaman, if I can't make it work on one of my ridiculously large number of coticules, then I use an India stone. I do try my hardest to stay with only coticules though. I have issues keeping the slurry on the stone, which I've yet to figure out, even after watching Liam do it a thousand times. Which makes me a constant slurry refresher. And that could be another hindrance. My theory though was that even if I didn't use any slurry at all, I would eventually get a sharp edge. I may have miscalculated tremendously on how long "eventually" might be.
JimmyHAD, it's still shaving arm hair. lol. It just won't shave facial hair. It'll pop arm and leg hair all day. In certain portions of the blade it'll fell them without noise. But it won't shave...not a lick. I'll do some more fighting with it tomorrow, and then post a pic of it. I spent some time talking to Randydance on Skype this evening, and he gave me some pointers. And told me some things that I hadn't really thought of. And yeah, I have put IMHO great edges on a few razors in a little bit of time. But I'm not gaining any repeatability, or efficiency. So I went a little crazy, but you all are quick to jump to the rescue for sure. Thanks so much!Last edited by regularjoe; 02-08-2012 at 04:48 AM.
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02-08-2012, 04:50 AM #9
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Thanked: 2591IMO you need to get a fast bevel setter, sometimes as Jimmy said you can get a razor that is really tough to hone, in that case a fast synthetic is very useful.
Stefan
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regularjoe (02-08-2012)
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02-08-2012, 07:56 AM #10IMO you need to get a fast bevel setter, sometimes as Jimmy said you can get a razor that is really tough to hone, in that case a fast synthetic is very useful.
Don't spend so many hours honing! you'll go mad, spend an hour a day, like you said the funs went out the window.
Do an hour a day and see if you can set a bevel, if you can do it in an hour good, if you can't, try tomorrow.
Hone happy, and if your not happy find something to make you happy, then hone.
You must have shoulders like a farm boy that lifts cows for fun by now with all that honing
regards alex
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regularjoe (02-10-2012)