You and I can separate the wheat from the chaff but a newbie will have big trouble doing so. That is what really bothers me.
This is not about smart and dumb, it is about experience. As you said not a rocket science, everything that there is to honing has already been invented, however some guys that have been honing for a few months already marketing themselves as inventors of new methods. Why is that? Profits! The ones that suffer are not the experienced shavers, but the newbies. They are being fed faulty information, latest mantra being that honing using circles is wrong. I have seen on more than one occasion claims that Gold Dollars are as good as any vintage razor and Filarmonica...What is that about?Quote:
Having said all of that...making blanket statements that someone who has or has not been a part of this hobby for "x" period of time, and by extension then has no credibility is also a bit of an overstatement. I hate to say it...but this is NOT rocket science. Both some of the smartest and also dumbest people throughout human history have been able to successfully shave and hone...and while it is a skill mostly lost, it is not that hard to pick up.
I thought that honemeisters were supposed to be able to hone any razor no matter wedge or hollow ground? Unless that is not true then a lot of folks out there that claim fame are not really worth their salt.Quote:
I don't see how your last remark honestly has anything to do with anything. If I were to sell my services and don't want to or like honing wedges, how in any way does that affect the quality of my honing of a hollow grind?