Results 1 to 10 of 18
Thread: Maintenance touchup
Hybrid View
-
12-18-2011, 03:24 PM #1
Maintenance touchup
I have read a number of times that with a barber's hone one can maintain an edge indefinitely. This might be a little hyperbole as if in fact this was common there sure are a lot of guys messing around with a slew of unnecessary stones.
What I was wondering was what are you standard maintenance routines to keep an good edge on your razor. I have fallen into a practice of running the razor across a barber's hone 5 times after three shaves, taking it to a CrO paddle for about five to ten strokes and then to the strop.
Do you have a pretty standard routine?
-
12-18-2011, 03:46 PM #2
I've only used my barber's hone once since receiving it but this is how I've got my schedule set.
Every Saturday I do 15 laps on a pasted balsa, followed by 100 laps on leather and I'm good for the week of 6 shaves. I plan to do 8 laps on the barber's hone, then 15 on balsa, followed by 100 on leather at the end of each month. I will play it by ear if I need to increase the hone use to 2 times a month.
-
The Following User Says Thank You to Str8nSharp For This Useful Post:
EucrisBoy (01-06-2012)
-
12-18-2011, 04:50 PM #3
There are tons of ways to go here. Any and all that work to your satisfaction are fine.
I tend to strop way too much. 80-100 linen, 50-100 on high draw leather, 100 on heavy shell. I rarely need a touch up, but I recently tried 2 sheets of newspaper on top of a c12k on a fussy Wacker. 70 light strokes. Then normal linen/leather routine. No stones needed - except to back the newspaper. Newspaper is far from a new approach. I'd just not heard of backing it w/ a hard surface until Murray's controversial vids. What I found was that the 'stickiness' that developes during normal stropping is fully present for the first stroke on linen/leather. Guys have tried abrasives on the paper, etc. Like the barber's hone, it won't recover an edge that's gone too far, but has been an interesting and useful experiment. 'Good for guys on a budget that have some hard flat surface to back paper with - glass, marble tile, etc. If the edge is too far gone, there's no avoiding stones.
Another fun one was using high grit diamond on top of a Spyderco UF. I got the idea from Robert William's old site. He was right. take a set bevel, .5m diamond on the UF, and you're lopping hairs in 10 careful strokes.
One thing to keep in mind is to have some fun at it. Worst case - you send your razor to be honed. It's not that costly, and many members will do it for free - just to further their experience honing.
Enjoy!
-
-
12-18-2011, 06:16 PM #4
- Join Date
- Oct 2008
- Posts
- 6,038
Thanked: 1195I'm fairly minimalist when it comes to hones, so it's pretty simple for me. My razors will usually see 3 chrome ox touchups (10-12 laps) before going to a stone. I really like the edges I get from my Naniwa 12k, so its my preferred touch up stone. 10-15 laps brings the edge back more than nicely. Sometimes I follow up with a few laps of chrome, other times I don't. It depends on what I feel the razor needs.
Occasionally, if I let the edge slip a bit too far, I'll bust out the Norton and either give it a few licks on the 8k side or do a small pyramid, then test shave. If it shaves acceptably I'll give it the Nani 12k treatment as described above.
I only have a couple razors that still have what I call a "pure coticule edge", so for those razors I use my coticule only. It's a hard specimen and takes quite a few laps before I see any improvement (water only), so I usually check the edge after 50 laps. I'll likely end up doing additional laps before the edge is where I like it.
Unfortunately, I only have to go to the stones a few times a year so I don't get to use them that often....
-
The Following User Says Thank You to Ryan82 For This Useful Post:
EucrisBoy (01-06-2012)
-
12-18-2011, 10:12 PM #5
I don't hone until the edge needs it and that can vary wildly from razor to razor. Usually as soon as the comfort level starts to deteriorate that's the sign to me. Usually I'll use either the Escher or Coticule and no more than 40 strokes, often times less is all I need and from time to time maybe 60. Maybe some CrO on a strop for that final polish and just a few strokes on that. Of course there are the rare "difficult razors" which require their own routine to bring back up to snuff but those are truly rare.
No matter how many men you kill you can't kill your successor-Emperor Nero
-
12-19-2011, 03:39 AM #6
My touch ups usually consist of 10 laps on a barber hone and 10 laps on .5 CrOx, then normal stropping
-dan-