Ceramic Sharpening Stones.

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Mike Wingate

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18 Oct 2009
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Once upon a time, I used a small Norton oil stone. Then a bigger one, then 2 others in fine and coarse grits. I added a few Diamond stones, DMT and EZeLap. I thought my planes were sharp until today when a colleague brought in his Fallkniven DC4 stone. A quick touch on my sharp plane iron really improved sharpness and cutting performance. Has anyone got a preference for any Ceramic stones. As my Big eZelap is 1200 grit, I was thinking of getting an 8000 grit stone.
 
Just bought a sone on Ebay. ELSASS NSI De Maas ceramic stone. Looking forward to using it on everything. Tormek, Diamond 1200, then Ceramic 8000, do I need to strop?
 
Hi,

I am a little confused by this ELSASS NSI De Maas ceramic stone. In what way is it ceramic? It appears to be a waterstone with a nagura stone for raising slurry. I thought ceramic were hard bonded sapphire based stones.

Alan
 
If it ain't organic or metallic it's a ceramic. Don't get too hung up on the expression. (Stu chip in any time here.)

It isn't the bond that makes the abrasive, it's the quality of the goodies within it.
 
Nah, he's an Aussie - they always turn up eventually.

(usually on your doorstep at 3AM with a backpack in one hand, a six pack in the other and a 'how the bloody hell are yah mate...?')
 
It does not matter what it is, It puts a really sharp edge on the tools and knives. It is really hard. I bought a 10" x 1/2" ceramic rod to sharpen serrated blades. You would not believe that 3 swipes with the ceramic could put such an edge to what was a sharp tool. It really raises a polished finih to the flat side of the blade.
 

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