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Thread: Kamisori addiction

  1. #21
    Senior Member blabbermouth
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    The nuisance sharpening is a product of hardness, I am glad you said that. If you had told me that it sharpened easier than white II or swede and lasted 10x as long, I might have felt the need to purchase some. I'm still going to hold out for a good white #1 make, forge purified or not.

    There is a video online of a group making a very large amount of tamahagane, I wonder if that is the sword society version that hitachi sells.

    The story of steels around the world, before the bessemer process, is an interesting one. I don't know that much of it, but I like to learn about as much of it as possible. Definitely is very interesting how places around the world had used the crucible and bessemer type processes long before they were ever commercialized. And also interesting is the history of steel and wrought iron coming from different places in the world when people in some regions had no idea why their steel was no good (i *think* the english had issues with sulfur, and I guess given that the base stock for tamahagane is sometimes referred to as "sand iron", I guess silica for the japanese).

    What is the most amazing is that in the pre-chemistry era, people tinkered and came up with processes that did in fact make very good and pure steel when they couldn't have known fully what was going on.

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    I agree. If you look at the engineering capabilities on a lot of old things. Building, roads, metallurgy, etc. Its quite amazing what good ol' trial and error was able to accomplish.

    Now with this thread being lively and all the great input about steels, hardness, and honing coming up I had to go and test out that Iwasaki. Both the Iwasaki and the Blue Steel Kanetaka were honed to HHT and a nicely polished finish and I would have to say that the Iwasaki was the better performer. It just seemed to shave nicer overall. The Kanetaka did a great job too but i much prefer the Iwasaki now.

    After I was done, a few runs on the strop and the Iwasaki was passing HHT again (This is very impressive to me as most razors aren't able to handle my hair for more than 1 shave before requiring a touchup... Head shaving for those curious).

    So now that i've figured out which one seems to agree with me best, its time to get my post count up so I can put the others on the BST

  3. #23
    I used Nakayamas for my house mainaman's Avatar
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    Yet if you have an option to try a real tamahagane razor do so you will find out it is somehow different than anything else, it is very nice experience.
    onimaru55 likes this.
    Stefan

  4. #24
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    Quote Originally Posted by mainaman View Post
    Yet if you have an option to try a real tamahagane razor do so you will find out it is somehow different than anything else, it is very nice experience.
    How do you find them different? Are they a smoother shaver? Hold an edge longer? I have one that should be coming tomorrow so i'm excited to get it honed up and test a shave on it. I've been on a mad hunt to find the "ultimate" razor for myself that can be my go-to razor. So far it seems that the Sheffield wedge razors are easier for me to use but I'm still not over the Japanese steel and blade style yet...

  5. #25
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    Quote Originally Posted by fchan View Post
    How do you find them different? Are they a smoother shaver? Hold an edge longer?
    They are different on the stones. I can't say anything about edge holding since I do not use one every day, there are stories that barbers could use those razors for hundreds of shaves with no touch ups but are they true who knows.
    Stefan

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    The Great & Powerful Oz onimaru55's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by mainaman View Post
    there are stories that barbers could use those razors for hundreds of shaves with no touch ups but are they true who knows.
    This story comes from Iwasaki honing manual & to put it in context, it was his praising of linen strops. I don't know if he exaggerated the numbers.

    "Recently, there are many people who don’t use a linen strop. An improperly maintained linen can damage your edge, but a well-cared-for linen strop can be a fantastic tool. I personally know two barbers who were each able to shave more than 1,000 people without needing to rehone their razors, through skillful use of linen. It really is best to use a properly prepared linen strop. A razor which won’t shave after being stropped on leather can often be restored to shaving form by proper linen use."
    “The white gleam of swords, not the black ink of books, clears doubts and uncertainties and bleak outlooks.”

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    fchan (10-03-2012)

  8. #27
    Senior Member blabbermouth
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    I think one of the iwasaki razors even has a story of over 1000 attached to it.

    On a woodworking board, someone told me they used their tamahagane kamisori every day for a year without rehoning it.

    I have been able to weed out some of the plane and chisel stories, just because I know how they fail and results from competitions bear out that the modern steels with lots of carbides will always beat a plain steel in a durability contest.

    But some reputable dealers and iwasaki have made some pretty big claims about their harder razors, and I can't say too much other than the razor may be the perfect instrument for a super plain carbon steel like tamahagane. I think my hope of getting a white #1 razor just aren't reasonable because no maker is going to go to the trouble of using white #1 and running it to 67 hardness unless they're getting the price they'd get for a tamahagane type steel with the mysticism that surrounds it.

  9. #28
    Senior Member blabbermouth
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    Quote Originally Posted by onimaru55 View Post
    This story comes from Iwasaki honing manual & to put it in context, it was his praising of linen strops. I don't know if he exaggerated the numbers.

    "Recently, there are many people who don’t use a linen strop. An improperly maintained linen can damage your edge, but a well-cared-for linen strop can be a fantastic tool. I personally know two barbers who were each able to shave more than 1,000 people without needing to rehone their razors, through skillful use of linen. It really is best to use a properly prepared linen strop. A razor which won’t shave after being stropped on leather can often be restored to shaving form by proper linen use."
    That explains a lot! Still is a very impressive number.

  10. #29
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    Quote Originally Posted by DaveW View Post
    I think one of the iwasaki razors even has a story of over 1000 attached to it.

    On a woodworking board, someone told me they used their tamahagane kamisori every day for a year without rehoning it.

    I have been able to weed out some of the plane and chisel stories, just because I know how they fail and results from competitions bear out that the modern steels with lots of carbides will always beat a plain steel in a durability contest.

    But some reputable dealers and iwasaki have made some pretty big claims about their harder razors, and I can't say too much other than the razor may be the perfect instrument for a super plain carbon steel like tamahagane. I think my hope of getting a white #1 razor just aren't reasonable because no maker is going to go to the trouble of using white #1 and running it to 67 hardness unless they're getting the price they'd get for a tamahagane type steel with the mysticism that surrounds it.
    there is also another component to the equation here, western Tamahagane Iwasakis are deferentially heat treated which also means there is decently high failure rate (for cutlery it is 1 in 3 blades failure rate), which would make prices higher in general. Not sure if white 1 can go that high in HRC without the same procedure though. I am guessing they used the method to make sure the spine is a bit softer to ensure proper wear during honing, but may be wrong
    Last edited by mainaman; 10-03-2012 at 01:26 AM.
    Stefan

  11. #30
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    I'm loving this dialogue guys, very informative and great to hear the legend separated from reality.

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