Zeddedhed
Established Member
OK, I know this could get nasty, so flak jacket and hard hat donned here's the situation....
Firstly, I don't need advice on a method or system, so we don't need to go down that road.
What I am interested to know is what type of bench stone will 'cut' the quickest.
I'm currently using an Axi double sided diamond stone (400g and 1000g) with a Veritas MKII guide and am trying to get all my chisels/plane irons back to a repeatable 25 deg bevel.
I'd previously been using a Tormek in the workshop and an old India stone on site and now have tools that whilst sharp are a mixture of all sorts of angles, some not even square to the edge of the iron/blade.
Thus I decided that the next thing to try was a less mechanised approach so purchased the Veritas guide. This can stay by the bench in the workshop and is easily portable if needed on site (or I ma buy another purely to keep in the toolbox)
The issue is that most of the chisels are at more than 25 degs, so getting them back to where I want them is taking ages on the 400g diamond stone.
Would I be better off with a coarse waterstone to start with or coarse Diamond plate? Which will get me there quicker?
The other question relates to the cleaning of diamond stones. I use mine with a spritz of 3 in 1. What is the best way to clean them so they are not clogged?
Answers appreciated - play nice
Firstly, I don't need advice on a method or system, so we don't need to go down that road.
What I am interested to know is what type of bench stone will 'cut' the quickest.
I'm currently using an Axi double sided diamond stone (400g and 1000g) with a Veritas MKII guide and am trying to get all my chisels/plane irons back to a repeatable 25 deg bevel.
I'd previously been using a Tormek in the workshop and an old India stone on site and now have tools that whilst sharp are a mixture of all sorts of angles, some not even square to the edge of the iron/blade.
Thus I decided that the next thing to try was a less mechanised approach so purchased the Veritas guide. This can stay by the bench in the workshop and is easily portable if needed on site (or I ma buy another purely to keep in the toolbox)
The issue is that most of the chisels are at more than 25 degs, so getting them back to where I want them is taking ages on the 400g diamond stone.
Would I be better off with a coarse waterstone to start with or coarse Diamond plate? Which will get me there quicker?
The other question relates to the cleaning of diamond stones. I use mine with a spritz of 3 in 1. What is the best way to clean them so they are not clogged?
Answers appreciated - play nice