View RSS Feed

mainaman

Daishi Tamahagane

Rate this Entry
by , 07-21-2011 at 02:34 AM (5640 Views)
I have tried a few Japanese made western straights before and loved them. The steel used by Japanese for tools , knives, planes, saws, razors is always top quality.
Because of my great experiences with Japanese straights, I started collecting collecting them, a few weeks back I got myself a NOS Daishi Tamahagane razor.
Name:  IMG_2876.jpg
Views: 7752
Size:  32.8 KB
Name:  IMG_2875.jpg
Views: 7893
Size:  37.8 KB

Whether this razor is made from Tamhagane- like steel or not I do not know, but it turned out to be a very interesting razor to hone.
I started with my usual bevel setter a Naniwa Chosera 1k, and did 20 circles on each side of the razor followe dby 10 x-strokes, then took a look at the edge with my scope. Not enough , so I did the same count one more time and this time the bevel was set, excpet there was a lot of microchips along the edge . I have honed a lot of razors on that stone and never seen anything like that. So I went to the next in line 1k Shapton GS, it did ok job but still not very nice looking bevel.
The bevel condition after two very consistent bevel setters led me to thinking the steel is indeed very hard if it chipped so easy. From previous experience, I knew Coticule is a very good stone for hard steels, so I put the razor to my coticules and did the dulicot with great results, I managed a nice even bevel. I am very fond of coticules, but I like to go higher on the finish scale so I went to my Oozuko and used Mejiro and tomonagira as a progression and finished on water only. I followed the same method described here and I was able to get the edge where I like it, very smooth and sharp.
From the whole experience I can't say if the steel is with similar properties to Tamahagane or not (I have never tried a traditional tamahagane edge) but it was pretty hard, harder than a Solingen for example.

The razor did not disappoint during the shave test, the shave was easy and BBS.
I am happy with this new addition to my Japanese Razor collection, they are all great shavers.
JimmyHAD, alx, maxim207 and 1 others like this.

Updated 07-21-2011 at 02:37 AM by mainaman

Categories
Uncategorized

Comments

  1. zib's Avatar
    Something else I can't pronounce...
    I have a few Western Style Japanese Str8's myself...
  2. Lemur's Avatar
    I've got a Daishi 800 Tamahagane on the way!
    Will be nice to try her out.
  3. engine46's Avatar
    Very good blog! I love it......................very educational.
  4. JeanPaul's Avatar
    Can anybody explain what the word Daishi means? I see many times 350 Daishi and 60 Daishi and I have no clue.
  5. Mefistho's Avatar
    Daishi Tamahagane is not actually made from Tamahagane steel.
    A Japanese razor made with tamahagane steel will always have the 玉鋼 stamp in kanji, not in alphabet. The last 3 letters "R. CO" refer to Tamahagane Company, not steel.
    The steel used in these razors is far to be compared with tamahagane.
    Iron sand is the ore from which Tamahagane steel is refined, it is not the same thing. The purify process is long and difficult
    There are also stainless steel razors made by Tamahagane R.CO, for example model M66