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Thread: Stropping is King
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12-12-2006, 09:21 PM #1
You guys don't think he is just realigning the edge with stropping? Or put another way, realigning it better?
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12-12-2006, 11:28 PM #2
Because the science and theory say "it won't work" it doesn't explain why it does.
I can't be persueded that stropping doesn't remove enuough material to sharpen an edge and polish at the same time.
Granted it will take longer, but then I'd expect it to. After finish honing with say a 8-12k hone, you could only go to something finer for the finishing steps with a strop. I base this on the leather strop wheels i use on my lathe for sharpening wood turning chisels. After grinding to the correct bevel and sharpness, I then put them across my leather hone mop. This you can see metal being removed all be it, slower. I will concede that heat is produced but this is not what removes metal, it's the abrasive qualities of the leather. I must point out that the speed is 300rpm or lower depending on the weight/mass of the tool being sharpened so that heat is not going to draw the temper too fast to correct.
So my point is that a plain leather strop does sharpen a razor all be it slow and finely. To use pasted strops just speeds up procees like going from 4k to 8k on a hone.
PuFF
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12-13-2006, 05:06 PM #3
[quote=PuFFaH;74586]
Because the science and theory say "it won't work" it doesn't explain why it does.
I can't be persueded that stropping doesn't remove enuough material to sharpen an edge and polish at the same time. Granted it will take longer, but then I'd expect it to.
I'm not saying a strop can't do it, but it would have to be abrasive enough to remove that much material. If you'e doing 40 reps each time, you would have to be abrasive enough to remove the material in 10 days (400 reps, 800 reps if you do 80 at a time). The number of reps is kind of typical, and the fact that abrasive honing or stropping is required after ten days tells you that the typical leather stop doesn't cut it, as confirmed by the profs research. Now if you did ten times that number of reps or used a machine, it might.
After finish honing with say a 8-12k hone, you could only go to something finer for the finishing steps with a strop. I base this on the leather strop wheels i use on my lathe for sharpening wood turning chisels. After grinding to the correct bevel and sharpness, I then put them across my leather hone mop. This you can see metal being removed all be it, slower.
I will concede that heat is produced but this is not what removes metal, it's the abrasive qualities of the leather.
I must point out that the speed is 300rpm
So my point is that a plain leather strop does sharpen a razor all be it slow and finely. To use pasted strops just speeds up procees like going from 4k to 8k on a hone.
Scott's approach is just an extension of refreshing. When we refresh we do a little material removal every ten days, as compared to doing a lot of material removal every few months. Scott removes a minute amout of material with every stropping, instead of removing a little every ten days.
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12-13-2006, 05:36 PM #4
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Thanked: 369Joe, you say there is some type of abrassive on my strop, but where did it come from?? I certainly haven't applied any paste or abrassive in the ten years I've been using it. And I've cleaned and dressed this strop many times over the years. It would seem that any paste that could have ever been on the strop would have been removed long ago or reduced to an ineffective amount.
Or, are you suggesting that horse hide cordovan strops are more abrassive than cowhide? That could be so, but I don't know.
Also, I do about 20-30 round trips on both linen and leather before each shave. Isn't this the standard number for most users?
It would be interesting to hear from others who use the Dubl-Duck strops.
Scott
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12-13-2006, 05:51 PM #5
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12-13-2006, 05:54 PM #6
[quote=honedright;74761]
Or, are you suggesting that horse hide cordovan strops are more abrassive than cowhide? That could be so, but I don't know.
[QUOTE] Also, I do about 20-30 round trips on both linen and leather before each shave. Isn't this the standard number for most users?/QUOTE]We had an experiment here that showed more than 60 made no difference (in terms of stropping only), and 45 seemed to be the sweet spot.
It would be interesting to hear who maintains their razor with stropping only for six months or more and what strops they use and how they're set up.
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12-13-2006, 06:18 PM #7
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Thanked: 369Regarding the urethane (highlighted quote above), you're confusing strops. There is no urethane on my daily strop. My daily strop is the Dubl-Duck - no urethane, no abrassive pastes, just skill.
You've already heard from one person (yours truly) "who maintains their razor with stropping only for six months or more and what strops they use and how they're set up."
Since my bringing this topic up, it seems that the above is a new concept for many. Not enough time has passed for most to put in the time and practice required to achieve the results that I've had. I think very soon though, you will start to hear from other SR users who are getting better shaves and going longer between honings now that they know it is possible.
ScottLast edited by honedright; 12-13-2006 at 07:09 PM.
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Tuxedo7 (11-17-2009)
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12-13-2006, 08:44 PM #8
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Thanked: 346It's a new concept because we've never noticed this before, and it's not like we're refreshing our blades every few weeks just for the fun of it (ok, maybe some of us). So why haven't we noticed our blades staying sharp month after month? Looking at your video and reading your descriptions I can't see where you're doing anything that I'm not already doing, which leads me to believe that there's something else responsible, something that you're not aware that's different about your technique or equipment.
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12-13-2006, 06:08 PM #9
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12-13-2006, 06:19 PM #10
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