Aha, Are these the chappies?
https://www.amazon.ca/Lansky-4-rod-C...8&sr=8-18&th=1
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Aha, Are these the chappies?
https://www.amazon.ca/Lansky-4-rod-C...8&sr=8-18&th=1
That was a very nice video, I enjoyed it. Those fixed honing jigs make for a consistent good edge.
I keep a little piece of wood in my kitchen, that has a coarse diamond hone on one side and a leather strop with 1 micron diamond paste on the other.
I am a fan of stropped coarse edges on my pocket and kitchen knives. I have a few knives that I will sharped to a fine edge but the majority get the wham bam thank you Mam edges
I'd say there was a good dose of Scots in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick with a large part of New Brunswick also being French (Acadian) after the Brits booted them out of Nova Scotia. The Acadians are closely related to the Louisiana Cajans from the same expulsion. Newfoundland definitely tends to be more Irish influenced. There still are French communities in Nova Scotia and Cape Breton. If you want to visit France without crossing the pond, you can go to one of the French islands in the Gulf of St Lawrence.
Bob
What are they like for longer knives?
Have seen them before, not a bad idea.
A vintage Carborundum 108 for me. Used under dripping water rather than oil.
Coarse side is great for veggies and general edge, the fine side is quite fine for raw meats.
Sometimes the coarse followed by just a couple of strokes on fine for a nice combo edge.
Regular maintenance is a must otherwise it takes the fun out of it.
That's what I normally use also. My brother got the sticks like Jamie's. In fact he got most of my Dad's sharpening stuff since he is a knife collector. The last time I talked to him about it I think he said he has over 2000 of them. Anyway, I got all or most at least of his Arkansas stones and anything razor related.
I did however get a pretty nice 2 sided 8 X 2 carborundum stone. I have no idea what the grits are but it's pretty course.on one side and pretty fine on the other. You can get these big long sweeps with a chef or butcher knife or Chinese cleaver. I usually wash it up and take it to a canvas and leather belt strops. Damn fine kitchen edge from it.
Works great with larger kitchen knives, never had any issues, here's a short video sharpening a 6" Chef knife.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HZqv2DbqoNA