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03-22-2012, 12:40 AM #1
- Join Date
- Feb 2012
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- Sarver, Pennsylvania, United States
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- 683
Thanked: 88I planned to listen to the vets and not start honing yet, but...
I saw a very inexpensive generic combo stone on that big auction site and my five unhoned razors and the barbor hone that came with one called out to me So I read a lot and watched a lot of videos and honed a couple of razors. I'm pretty happy to have more than one honed razor now. I tried to hone three razors; two turned out good (smaller vintage Solingens) and one never really sharpened up. The one that didn't work out was a certain infamous cheapy that I bought just to see how bad or good it really was. That razor may be able to be honed, but not by me at this stage of my learning.
I probably should have put this in the Maintenance -> Honing section. Sorry.Last edited by DFriedl; 03-22-2012 at 12:47 AM.
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03-22-2012, 01:12 AM #2
There's nothing wrong with that, everybody has to start someplace. Sounds like your a hands on type of guy and that's the way to be. I'm not a honemeister, but I can put a comfortable shaving edge on a razor.
The key in my humble opinion is to learn how your hones work and then apply that to the particular razor. Bevel setting is fundamental, without a good bevel forget it, everything stems from a properly set bevel.
I know I'll get flamed for this but oh well, honing isnt rocket science, but an acquired skill that's an art form. Practice using the proper strokes and pressure is the only way you get better. If you make a mistake, then you figure out how to fix it. Everybody at one point in time has had problems so I'm sure there's somebody on here that can help you figure out whats wrong.
To me this is an adventure and a journey so enjoy it, that's what this is all about.Last edited by twogun; 03-22-2012 at 01:14 AM.
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03-22-2012, 02:01 AM #3
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03-22-2012, 01:40 PM #4
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03-22-2012, 01:56 PM #5
- Join Date
- Feb 2012
- Location
- Sarver, Pennsylvania, United States
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- 683
Thanked: 88It wasn't bad. Not as good as the job another member did for me a month ago, but I didn't use the barber hone as a finisher, as I planned. I'm not sure how to use it. We'll come back to that...
My combo stone is 1200 / 3000-ish. The razor I honed with it was dull with little noticeable bevel at all before honing. I shaved with it this morning and it didn't tug particularly, but didn't cut as effortlessly as the one someone else honed for me. Not much irritation, but not quite as good a shave. I assume I need to hone it finer than 3000.
The old barber hone: does it get soaked like my combo stone? Or is it a oil stone? Or should it be used dry? It's just an old typical barber hone - an Amalgamite.
Thanks for the replies and information guys!
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03-22-2012, 04:03 PM #6
My barber hone (I have a Swaty) does not soak, as a matter of fact water does not even stick to it so I use lather or a bit of soap on it's surface before a touchup. I don't know how good it would turn to be as a finisher, it's rather intended to be used for maintaining a razor. May worth trying though, I'm positive that more than one of the guru's here experimented with it
Before using your barber hone, if you haven't already, IMO lap it good on 400 grit sand paper then 800 or higher until it has a velvet smooth surface.
For finishing, I'd think you'd better be served by a 8K stone. A Norton or Naniwa 4k/8k combo stone would be probably more cost effective.Last edited by algernon; 03-22-2012 at 04:07 PM.
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03-22-2012, 04:49 PM #7
I agree with algernon. you'll probably want an 4000k/8000k norton. Once you get these down you could add the higher grit hones to really get a really good shaving edge.
But to work with what you've got, give the barber hone a try. Each hone is a little different and some cut a little faster, some a little slower, etc. Most I have seem to be in the 8000k range.
I use lather with a little more water than usual. Try the blade with 12 laps and pressure of the blade only and see how it shaves. Your not going to get the same polished edge as 12k hones and up, but you should get a pretty comfortable shave with some work if the bevels set correctly. Strop the blade about 50 laps on linen and about 100 laps on leather after the hone and see how the blade shaves. If its not where you want do a couple more laps on the hone, strop and check how it shaves.
I've got some blades that just seem to respond better to the old barber hones, and its handy to touch an edge up on the fly while shaving.
Again this isn't the end all be all, but working with what you have at the moment.
Let us know how it works for you.
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03-23-2012, 03:43 AM #8
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- Jan 2012
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- 388
Thanked: 51I'm still a noob honer, as well, but I couldn't agree more. I've found honing to be a relatively straight-forward process once you get past setting the bevel, which can take a while depending on the condition of the razor. Once the bevel is set, the razors will almost hone themselves as long as you don't raise the spine and gouge the edge.
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03-23-2012, 06:53 AM #9
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03-23-2012, 07:49 AM #10
- Join Date
- Aug 2006
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- Maleny, Australia
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Thanked: 1587It rubs the razor on the hone or it gets the hose again.
James.<This signature intentionally left blank>
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pinklather (04-16-2012)